ABSTRACT

Drawing from a wide range of Uzbek and Russian sources, James Critchlow analyzes significant developments leading up to Uzbekistan's declaration of sovereignty and examines the outlook for the republic's emergence as an independent international player. The author's primary focus is on the Uzbek elites' attitudes and their efforts to throw off Moscow's hegemony by using popular grievances to mobilize mass support against the central Soviet government. Critchlow traces local grievances to two roots. The first is Uzbekistan's decades-long economic exploitation by Moscow through the imposition of an intensive cotton monoculture, the accumulated effects of which have been massive environmental degradation, illness, and death. The second is the central government's failure to adequately compensate Uzbekistan for these hardships and for the republic's overall contribution to the Soviet economy, while having further impoverished Uzbeks by limiting the range of their cultural and political expression. Among the manifestations of Uzbek resistance explored here are protests against russification and compulsory military conscription; persistent and open adherence to religious traditions; and loyalty above all to local political, ethnic, and family ties-- which frequently has led Moscow to charge the republic's leadership with "nepotism" and "corruption". Now that their campaign for sovereignty has triumphed, will Uzbek leaders be able to solve the knotty political and economic problems their republic still faces? The analysis offered here illuminates this question and suggests possible answers.

part One|54 pages

The Rise of Uzbek Nationalism

part Two|133 pages

Uzbek Nationalism Today: Selected Themes

chapter 4|15 pages

The Cotton Monoculture

chapter 5|22 pages

Rape of the Environment

chapter 6|19 pages

Objection to the Russian Presence

chapter 7|18 pages

Undoing the Russian Version of History

chapter 8|19 pages

Resistance to Authority

chapter 9|10 pages

The Recruit “Murder” Scandal

chapter 10|21 pages

The Islamic Factor

part Three|24 pages

Problems of Sovereignty

chapter 11|14 pages

Uzbekistan in Transition

chapter |8 pages

Afterword

The Shape of Things to Come