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This comprehensive book focuses on the challenges facing Ukraine as
a newly emerged state after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Like
all countries with no recent history of independence, Ukraine had
to invent or recreate effective political institutions, reintroduce
a market economy, and reorient its foreign policy. These tasks were
impossible to accomplish without resolving the question of national
identity. In this balanced and clear-eyed assessment, a team of
U.S. and Ukrainian specialists explores the external and internal
dimensions of national identity and statehood, providing a wealth
of information previously unavailable to Western scholars. Arguing
that the search for national identity is a multidimensional
process, the authors show that it reflects the realities of the
dawning twenty-first century. Paradoxically, this quest must cope
with the both the weakening of state boundaries caused by
globalization and the strengthening of the national model as new
countries emerge from the disintegration of the Soviet Union and
Yugoslavia. After providing the historical context of Ukraine s
international debut, the book analyzes the complexities of
constructing a national identity. The authors explore questions of
ethnic relations and regionalism, the development of political
values and attitudes, mass-elite relations, the cultural background
of economic strategies, gender issues, and the threat of organized
crime to emergent civil society."
The demise of the Soviet Union, and the emergence of independent
republics in its wake, have had profound implications for the
regions on its periphery. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the
Caucasus and Central Asia. The essays in this book explore the
complex ways in which these republics have found both independence
and a new regional identity in their relations with the
neighbouring Middle East. Religion, hydro-carbons, transportation
needs and ethnic relations with the Gulf States have been
rediscovered by the new republics, the study of which provides the
basic subject matter for the book. The interests and activities of
other regional powers are not excluded, with particular attention
being given to the playing out of Russian, Turkish and American
interests in countering the perceived rise of political Islam in
the Caucasus and Central Asia.
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