ABSTRACT

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Central Asian states have developed liberal-constitutional formal institutions. However, at the same time, political phenomena in Central Asia are shaped by informal political behaviour and relations. This relationship is now a critical issue affecting democratization and regime consolidation processes in former Soviet Central Asia, and this book provides an account of the interactive and dynamic relationship between informal and formal politics through the case of party-system formation in Kazakhstan.

Based on extensive interviews with political actors and a wide range of historical and contemporary documentary sources, the book utilises and develops neopatrimonialism as an analytical concept for studying post-Soviet authoritarian consolidation and failed democratisation. It illustrates how personalism of political office, patronage and patron-client networks and factional elite conflict have influenced and shaped the institutional constraints affecting party development, the type of emerging parties and parties’ relationship with society. The case of Kazakhstan, however, also demonstrates how in the former Soviet space political parties emerge as central to the legitimization of informal political behavior, the structuring of factional competition and the consolidation of authoritarianism. The book represents an important contribution to the study of Central Asian Politics.

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction

In-between the informal and formal – introducing political development in Kazakhstan and Central Asia

chapter 2|29 pages

Neopatrimonialism and party development

A framework for analysis

chapter 3|29 pages

Uncertain transition

The development of neopatrimonialism in Kazakhstan

chapter 4|27 pages

The institutional constraints on political parties

Presidency, elections and the law on political parties

chapter 5|26 pages

What type of parties?

Membership, organization, ideology and behavioural norms

chapter 6|26 pages

Passiveness and disconnection

Parties and society in Kazakhstan

chapter 7|19 pages

Conclusion

Patrimonial politics and party development in Kazakhstan and beyond