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Ethnicity, Nationalism and Conflict in and after the Soviet Union
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Ethnicity, Nationalism and Conflict in and after the Soviet Union
The Mind Aflame

  • Valery Tishkov - Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences and International Peace Research Institute, Oslo


352 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
From February to October 1992, Valery Tishkov served as Minister of Nationalities of the government of Russia. This book is his account of ethnicity, nationalism, and conflict in the territory of the former Soviet Union, focusing particularly on the Russian federation, and drawing on his personal political experience and inside knowledge of major events. He analyzes the demographic, ecological, and cultural backgrounds of ethnic tensions and conflict, and carefully measures grassroots ethnic attitudes and cultural interactions, which do not always correspond to intellectual and political statements and claims.
 
Introduction
The Feel of the Game

 
 
PART ONE: GENERAL APPROACHES AND ISSUES
 
Ethnicity in the Soviet and Post-Soviet Context
 
Soviet Ethnic Engineering
Success and Failure

 
 
Ethno-Politics in a Time of Transition
 
Territories, Resources and Power
 
Cultures and Languages in Conflict
 
PART TWO: CASE STUDIES
 
The Russians are Leaving
Central Asia and Kazakhstan

 
 
The Culture of Ethnic Violence
The Osh Conflict

 
 
The Anatomy of Ethnic Violence
The Ingush-Ossetian Conflict

 
 
Ambition and the Arrogance of Power
The Chechen War (Part I)

 
 
Ambition and the Arrogance of Power
The Chechen War (Part II)

 
 
PART THREE: GOVERNING CONFLICTING ETHNICITY
 
Post-Soviet Nationalism
 
What is Rossia? Identities in Transition
 
Strategies for Ethnic Accord in Post-Soviet States
 
PART FOUR: CONCLUSION: DESTROYING REALITY THROUGH THEORY (OR `BACK TO THE IVORY TOWERS')

`This book is a great read. It will be a `must' for all those involved in studying contemporary nationalism' - Social Anthropology

`This book is a `must read' for anyone interested in how nationalism and ethnicity contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union, why it persists today and what can be done to keep it in check' -Nations and Nationalism

`Valery Tishkov's Ethnicity, Nationalism and Conflict in and after the Soviet Union is excellent. This book is among the very best on the subject' - Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management

`The best book on ethnic relations and nationalism in the Soviet Union and its successor states ever published by a Russian scholar... Tishkov's book is a remarkable achievement and I hope it will attract the serious attention of Western scholars' - Ethnos

`Valery Tishkov has written a theoretically sophisticated, empirically rich, and policy relevant book, certainly one of the best and most complete works that have so far appeared on the theme of ethnicity and nationalism in the last years of the Soviet Union and in the post-Soviet period' - Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies

`For forty-five years Europe was divided. While a new era has begun, and East and West now engage in constructive issues of politics, economics and security, Europe remains a divided continent...Valery Tishkov manages to bridge the divide. In a style which is never dull and always informative, he outlines the limitations of the conceptual approaches to nationalism which have been adopted by academics in the East and West... Tishkov's criticism is that pseudo-scholarly terms and categories which should never have been placed in any disciplinary discourse have permeated and undermined the work of a generation of academics...Tishkov traces how these events have come to pass by conducting a comprehensive review of the literature and by then placing the scholarly debate within he context of the political events of the late Soviet period...He clearly identifies the situations where mistakes were made, where recommendations could have been more cautious, and where it was impossible to make any other choice than the one which was made. The reader acquires a clear understanding of the events and their causes, as they were perceived at that time. This is an impressive tome. One which should do more than simply adorn a scholar's shelf. It should be read and studied if the academic divide is to be narrowed' - The Ethnic Conflict Research Digest

`Valery Tishkov brings a unique combination of conceptual sophistication, first-hand experience, and wide-ranging knowledge to the task of deciphering ethnic conflict in the former Soviet Union. The result is a major contribution to the understanding of ethnic phenomena. It is theoretically interesting, relevant to policy, and rich in its depictions of antipathy and violence from the Caucasus to Central Asia and beyond. This is a masterful work' - Donald L Horowitz, James B Duke Professor of Law and Political Science, Duke University

`Valery Tishkov's penetrating study of the post-Soviet world of ethnic strife is written by a scholar who has been a prominent participant as well as close observer of the recent developments. I am impressed by the force and insight of his analysis and touched by the intensity of his commitment. Tishkov's impassioned appeal to intellectuals and politicians to desist from the production of confrontational ethnic ideologies goes to the heart of the tragic processes that are underway and is broadly applicable in most parts of the contemporary world' - Fredrik Barth, Professor of Anthropology, University of Oslo

`This book is a great read. It will be a 'must' for all those involved in studying contemporary nationalism.' - Social Anthropology

Valery Tishkov

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