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After the final collapse of the Soviet Union, the so-called 'last
empire', in 1991, the countries of Central Asia - Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan - and of the
Caucasus - Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia - became independent
nations. These countries, previously production centres under the
socialist planning system of the Soviet Union, have made enormous
economic adjustments in order to develop - or attempt to develop -
along capitalist lines. As this study will show, however,
inequality in Central Asia and the Caucasus is widening, as the
Soviet systems of healthcare and state provisions disappear.
Rejecting the Cold War-era East/West paradigm often used to analyse
the development of these nations, this study analyses development
along the North-South lines which characterise the migration
patterns and poverty levels of much of the rest of the developed
world. This opens up new avenues of research, and helps us
understand why it is, for instance, that this region is better
characterised as a 'new South' - as skilled workers flood out of
the territories and into Russia and Western Europe. Development in
Central Asia and the Caucasus draws together detailed analyses of
the development of migration economics as the region's oil wealth
further enhances its strategic and economic importance to Russia,
the US, the Middle East and to the EU.
The southernmost and poorest state of the Eurasian space,
Tajikistan collapsed immediately upon the fall of the Soviet Union
and plunged into a bloody five-year civil war (1992-1997) that left
more than 50,000 people dead and more than half a million
displaced. After the 1997 Peace Agreements, Tajikistan stood out
for being the only post-Soviet country to recognize an Islamic
party-the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (IRPT)-as a key
actor in the civil war as well as in postwar reconstruction and
democratization. Tajikistan's linguistic and cultural proximity to
Iran notwithstanding, the balance of external powers over the
country remains fairly typical of Central Asia, with Russia as the
major security provider and China as its principal investor.
Another specificity of Tajikistan is its massive labor migration
flows toward Russia. Out of a population of eight million, about
one million work abroad seasonally-one of the highest rates of
departure in the world. Migration trends have impacted Tajikistan's
economy and rent mechanisms: half of the country's GDP comes from
migrant remittances, a higher share than anywhere else in the
world. However, it is in the societal and cultural realms that
migration has had the most transformative effect. Migrants'
cultural and societal identities are on the move, with a growing
role given to Islam as a normative tool for regulating the cultural
shock of migration. Islam, and especially a globalized
fundamentalist pietist movement, regulates both physical and moral
security in workplace and other settings, and brings migrants
together to make their interactions meaningful and
socio-politically relevant. It offers a new social prestige to
those who work in an environment seen as threatening to their
Islamic identity. The first section of this volume investigates the
critical question of the nature of the Tajik political regime, its
stability, legitimacy mechanisms, and patterns of centralization.
In the volume's second part, we move away from studying the state
to delve into the societal fabric of Tajikistan, shaped by local
rural specificities and social vulnerabilities in the health sector
and gender relationships. The third section of the volume is
devoted to identity narratives and changes. While the Tajik regime
works hard to control the national narrative and the interpretation
of the civil war, society is literally and figuratively on the
move, as migration profoundly reshapes societal structures and
cultural values.
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