No. 6, Issue 36, 2005

CENTRAL ASIA AND THE CAUCASUS
No. 6, Issue 36, 2005
IN THIS ISSUE:

DEMOCRACY AND TRANSITION PERIOD

Sergey Zhiltsov. REVOLUTIONARY WAVES IN THE POST-SOVIET EXPANSE

Arthur Atanesian. PARADOXES OF DEMOCRACY AND DEMOCRATIZATION TRENDS IN CENTRAL ASIA AND THE SOUTHERN CAUCASUS

Nikolai Borisov. TRANSFORMATION IN THE POLITICAL REGIME IN UZBEKISTAN: STAGES AND OUTCOME

BORDER ISSUE

Ekaterina Arkhipova. THE BORDERS BETWEEN AZERBAIJAN, GEORGIA, AND RUSSIA: SOVIET HERITAGE

REGIONAL POLITICS

Rashid Abdullo. CENTRAL ASIAN COUNTRIES AND THE UNITED STATES: UPS AND DOWNS IN THEIR RELATIONSHIPS

Rauf Garagozov. COLLECTIVE MEMORY AND MEMORY POLITICS IN THE CENTRAL CAUCASIAN COUNTRIES

Irina Babich. THE NORTHERN CAUCASUS: THE STATEHOOD ISSUE AS TREATED BY THE NATIONAL, ISLAMIC, AND POLITICAL MOVEMENTS

Sergey Minasian. ARMENIA AND THE EU’S EUROPEAN NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY PROGRAM

REGIONAL SECURITY

Irina Komissina. AFGHANISTAN: DRUG TRAFFICKING AND REGIONAL SECURITY

Valery Petukhov. THE NORTH CAUCASIAN PRESS ABOUT TERRORISM

Abdurakhmon Makhmadov, Makhfirat Khidirova. TAJIKISTAN: NEW STABILITY THREATS AND HOW TO AVOID THEM

REGIONAL ECONOMIES

Malcolm Dowling, Ganeshan Wignaraja. TURNING THE CORNER: THE ECONOMIC REVIVAL OF CENTRAL ASIA

Gulnur Rakhmatullina. INTEGRATION PROCESSES IN CENTRAL ASIA. PROSPECTS FOR A COMMON MARKET

Lasha Tchantouridzé. THE IMF IN GEORGIA: EVALUATING THE FUND’S UNIQUE VISION OF ECONOMIC SUCCESS

ETHNIC RELATIONS AND POPULATION MIGRATION

Saodat Olimova. MIGRATION IN THE MOUNTAINOUS REGIONS OF EURASIA: PAST AND PRESENT (Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan, and Pakistan)

Sudaba Zeynalova. GERMANS IN AZERBAIJAN: A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS

Mamuka Komakhia. THE GREEKS OF GEORGIA: MIGRATION AND SOCIOECONOMIC PROBLEMS

FOR YOUR INFORMATION

The Special Feature section in the next issue will discuss: Central Asia and the Caucasus

  • What Makes the Parliamentary and Presidential Elections in Central Asia and the Caucasus Specific
  • Political and Economic Development Trends
  • World and Regional Centers of Power and their Impact on the Regional Situation