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List of contents
Part 1: Overview 1. Economic transition and institutional change in Central Asia Part 2: Country-specific investigations 2. Transition strategies in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan since independence: paradoxes and prospects 3. Social capital and the formation of a market economy: the case of Uzbekistan 4. Turkmenistan after Turkmenbashi 5. Poverty, governance, and participation in Central Asia: The example of Tajikistan 6. The political economy of Kazakh foreign policy 7. The institutional persistence of patrimonialism in the Kyrgyz Republic: Testing a path dependency (1991–2010) Part 3: Governance and institutions 8. The political economy of governance reform in Central Asia 9. Informal integration and decentralization in Central Asia 10. Analyzing bottlenecks for institutional development in Central Asia: Is it oil, aid, or geography? Part 4: External actors and international structures 11. Will Russia regain its dominant role in Central Asia? 12. Central Asia and Russia: Two alternative perspectives 13. The European Union and Central Asia: A case of policy transfer 14. The USA and Central Asia: Intermittent allies 15. Central Asian countries: Forms of international integration and the impact of the crisis of 2008
About the author
Joachim Ahrens is Professor of International Economics at the Private University of Applied Sciences Göttingen, Germany.
Herman W. Hoen is Professor of International Political Economy at the Department of International Relations of the University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Summary
The countries of Central Asia are increasingly the focus of intense international attention due to their geopolitical and economic importance as well as their unsettled transition processes. The region faced enormous challenges when the Soviet Union disintegrated, and this book focuses on the reforms of the institutional environment that have been largely neglected.
Additional text
"For the area specialists, the book is a study of a lesser-examined aspect of the Central Asian region. For economists, it is a set of case studies that are different from those normally reviewed. And for the general comparativists, the book provides insights into a region in terms that can then be applied globally.[...] After more than twenty years of independence, it is a good sign to see authors consider the region part of the world community." - Roger D. Kangas, Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies, Washington, D.C., Slavic Review