Оглавление
Группа авторов. Post-Soviet Secessionism
Post-Soviet Secessionism. Introductory Remarks
Bibliography
Abkhazia, Transnistria and North Cyprus Recognition and Non-Recognition in Ceasefire and Trade Agreements1
1. Introduction
2. Policies of Recognition and Non-Recognition
3. Contested States
4. Ceasefire Agreements. A. Georgia and Abkhazia
B. Moldova and Transnistria
C. Cyprus and North Cyprus
5. Trade Agreements. A. North Cyprus
B. Moldova and Transnistria
C. Georgia and Abkhazia
6. Comparisons and Conclusions
Bibliography
The World-System and Post-Soviet De Facto States1
1. Methodology. 1.1. Core-Periphery Differentiation
1.2. Definition of Non-Recognised States (NRS)
1.3. Data on Non-Recognised States
2. Post-Soviet Non-Recognised States (NRS)
2.1. The Economic Specifics of Post-Soviet NRS
2.2. Political Systems of Post-Soviet NRS
3. Findings and Conclusions
Bibliography
Small State or Big Bargainer? Azerbaijan’s and Georgia’s Agency in Russia’s and Turkey’s Near Abroad
Agency of Small States
Dynamic Dimension
External Dimension
Outcome Dimension
Different Dynamics in Azerbaijan and Georgia. Azerbaijan: Independence from Foreign Influence for the Ruling Elite
Georgia: Integration Illusion?
Russia in the Region: Enemy or Role Model?
Azerbaijani-Russian Relations: Recent Selective Mimicry
Georgian-Russian Relations: Many Instruments, Many Storylines
Turkey in the Region: Brothers or Others?
Azerbaijani-Turkish Relations: Put Offside with Football Diplomacy
Georgian-Turkish Relations: A Marriage of Inconvenience?
Conclusion
Azerbaijan
Georgia
Bibliography
War and State-Making in Ukraine. Forging a Civic Identity from Below?
Introduction
The Effects of War on Identities
Identity and Cleavages in Ukraine
Data and Methodology
Descriptive Statistics
Findings
Conclusion
Bibliography
Internal Legitimacy and Governance in the Absence of Recognition. The Cases of the Donetsk and Luhansk “People’s Republics”
Degrees of Legitimacy
The Use of Referendums
External Support and Governance in the DPR/LPR
Security
Economy
Social Welfare Programs
Conclusion: Prospects for Reintegrating the Donbas?
Bibliography
Post-Soviet Separatism in Historical Perspective
Nation or Empire? The Questions of 1917 and the Questions of Today
Violence and Civility: Perestroika, End of Empire and the Return of Separatism
Imperial Disintegration and Post-Imperial Conflict: 1991 and the End of the USSR
The Paradoxes of Post-Soviet Separatism
Violent Men and Imperial Come-Back: The Politics of 2014
Conclusions
Bibliography:
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