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Kyrgyzstan beyond ""Democracy Island"" and ""Failing State""

Social and Political Changes in a Post-Soviet Society
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Kyrgyzstan is probably the best known of any central Asian country, the one that has elicited the most academic publications, reports by NGOs or advocacy groups, and op-eds in the media. The country opened up massively to Western influence through development aid for civil society and for economic reforms, faced two revolutions in 2005 and 2010, and experienced bloody interethnic conflict in 2010. Kyrgyzstan is therefore commonly studied as a twin case: that of having been, for more than two decades, both an "island of democracy" in Central Asia-and the only country of the region to have made the transition to a parliamentary regime-and the archetypical example of a "failing state," one marked by endemic corruption, criminalization of the state apparatus, and collapse of public services. This volume goes beyond these two cliches and provides a research-based and unideological narrative on the country. It identifies political dynamics, their powerbrokers, and the role of international organizations; investigates the profound social transformations of both the rural and the urban worlds; and examines the broad feeling, by local actors, that Kyrgyzstan's fragile state identity should be consolidated. This book gives the floor to the new generation of scholars whose long-term vernacular-language field research made it possible to provide new interpretative prisms for the complex evolution of Kyrgyzstan.
Chapter 1: Kyrgyzstan and the Trials of Independence, Johan Engvall Chapter 2: The Evolving Role of Political Parties in Kyrgyz Politics, Shairbek Juraev Chapter 3: Why Are Public Offices Sold in Kyrgyzstan?, Johan Engvall Chapter 4: Peripheral Protests as an Opportunity: "Brokers" in Action, Asel Doolotkeldieva Chapter 5: In Search of Tolerantnost': Preventive Development and Its Limits at the Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan Border, Madeleine Reeves Chapter 6: Why Class Matters in Kyrgyzstan: Everyday Experiences, Moral Sentiments, and the Politics of the Poor, Elmira Satybaldieva Chapter 7: Sewing to satisfaction: craft-based entrepreneurs in contemporary Kyrgyzstan, Aisalkyn Botoeva and Regine A. Spector Chapter 8: Myths and Realities of Bishkek's Novostroikas, Emil Nasritdinov, Bermet Zhumakadyr kyzy, and Diana Asanalieva Chapter 9: Kyrgyzstan's Nationhood: From a Monopoly of Production to a Plural Market, Marlene Laruelle Chapter 10: The Affective Politics of Sovereignty: Reflecting on the 2010 Conflict in Kyrgyzstan, David Gullette and John Heathershaw Chapter 11: "We Disputed Every Word": The Plight of Moderates in Post-Violence Kyrgyzstan, Erica Marat Chapter 12: Islam beyond Democracy and State in Kyrgyzstan, David W. Montgomery
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