ABSTRACT

The multicultural region of Central Eurasia is living through its early post-independence years and as such serves as an ideal case to study and analyse theories of identity and foreign policy in a non-European context. Looking to re-introduce identity as a multidimensional factor informing state behaviour, this book analyses the experiences of the different Central Eurasian states in their post-independence pursuits.

The book is structured into two broadly defined sections, with the first half examining the different ways in which the combination of domestic, regional, international and trans-national forces worked to advance one national identity over the others in the states that comprise the region of post-Soviet Central Eurasia. In the second half, chapters analyse the many ways in which identity, once shaped, affected foreign policy behaviours of the regional states, as well as the overall security dynamics in the region. The book also looks at the ways in which identity, by doing so, enjoys an intricate, mutually constitutive relationship with the strategic context in which it bears its effects on the state and the region. Finally, given the special role Russia has historically played in defining the evolutionary trajectory of the regional states, the book discusses the ways in which Russia itself and its post-cold war policies towards its former colonies have been conditioned by factors associated with Russia’s evolving post-Soviet identity.

Placing the region firmly within existing theories of identity and state practices, the book will be of interest to students and scholars of Central Asian Politics, Security Studies, Foreign Policy and International Relations.

 

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Identity as a source and an output of foreign policy and regional security in post-Soviet Central Eurasia – towards integrating nationalism scholarship into IR constructivism

part 1|84 pages

Nation-building and emerging identities in post-Soviet Central Eurasia

chapter 1|25 pages

Threat perceptions of Islam in a post-communist secular context

Public policies towards Islamic finance in Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan and the effects on nation-building

chapter 2|25 pages

Language and sovereignty

A comparative analysis of language policy in Tatarstan and Kazakhstan, 1991–2010

chapter 3|13 pages

Identity recovered vs identity redefined

Three post-Soviet cases

chapter 4|19 pages

Domesticating elite education

Raising patriots and educating Kazakhstan's future

part 2|104 pages

From identity to foreign policy back to identity

chapter 5|31 pages

Russian foreign policy towards Central Asia and the Caucasus since the end of the cold war

A search for identity with geopolitical characteristics

chapter 6|24 pages

International commitments to international election observation in the Caucasus and Central Asia

The interplay between political identity, foreign policy and regional affiliations

chapter 8|24 pages

International cultural engagements and their domestic effects

Eurovision and nation-building in Azerbaijan