|
Showing 1 - 25 of
25 matches in All Departments
How has the Ukrainian state sought to build national identity
over the past decade, and with what results? The premise of the
book is that assertions about the role of the state in identity
politics should be treated as questions to be debated theoretically
and studied empirically instead of assumptions made casually and
left unexamined. Each essay begins with a common set of questions.
Is it true that overcoming Ukraine's current cleavages is a
prerequisite for holding the country together or for reforming it?
How have the legacies of history constrained the state's
nation-building project? What obstructing cleavages exist, and what
sorts of national identity might provide a solid foundation for
building an overarching Ukrainian national identity? Statistical
analysis of mass attitudes, case studies on culture, education, the
military, and foreign policy provide a detailed look at efforts to
promote national identity, with surprising conclusions. Taken
together the essays provide an overdue evaluation of the role of
the state in nation building.
Ukraine played a key role in the dissolution of the former USSR,
and its continued independence will have a decisive impact upon the
transformation of Russia itself into either a new empire or Western
democracy. The economic crisis and mismanagement that engulfed
Ukraine during 1993 through 1994 led many in the West and among
Ukraine's neighbors to question the country's long-term viability
as an independent state. In 1995 Ukraine has entered a new era
reflecting its importance as a linchpin of regional security and
stability in Europe. This study discusses Ukrainian security
policies and their implications for Western policy. It makes a
compelling case for greater Western aid and political support for
Ukrainian independence and territorial integrity.
A key country for stability and security in Europe, Ukraine is
struggling to create consistent foreign and security policies.
Political alliances, identity struggles, economic goals, and
geopolitical position all pull this newly emergent state in
different and often conflicting directions. Due to its dependencies
on both the West and Russia, Ukraine's foreign policy is in a state
of flux. To ensure stability in this newly-emergent state, the
contributors to this volume argue that the West should be more
assertive in offering an unambiguous developmental perspective,
supporting democracy and the rule of law, and offer E.U.
affiliation in the near future. International Relations theory and
Ukraine's foreign policy are examined in the first section,
followed by chapters exploring civil-military relations. Next comes
a look at Ukraine's foreign and security policy orientations in
comparative context. The book concludes with chapters focusing on
matters of national identity, ideology, and their impact on
Ukrainian security policy. Scholars and analysts of contemporary
Eastern European politics will be interested in what these
well-known scholars and government officials have to say about the
contemporary state of affairs in this pivotal nation.
This book is the first to provide an in-depth understanding of the
2014 crisis, Russia's annexation of Crimea and Europe's de facto
war between Russia and Ukraine. The book provides a historical and
contemporary understanding behind President Vladimir Putin Russia's
obsession with Ukraine and why Western opprobrium and sanctions
have not deterred Russian military aggression. The volume provides
a wealth of detail about the inability of Russia, from the time of
the Tsarist Empire, throughout the era of the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR), and since the dissolution of the latter
in 1991, to accept Ukraine as an independent country and Ukrainians
as a people distinct and separate from Russians. The book
highlights the sources of this lack of acceptance in aspects of
Russian national identity. In the Soviet period, Russians
principally identified themselves not with the Russian Soviet
Federative Republic, but rather with the USSR as a whole. Attempts
in the 1990s to forge a post-imperial Russian civic identity
grounded in the newly independent Russian Federation were
unpopular, and notions of a far larger Russian 'imagined community'
came to the fore. A post-Soviet integration of Tsarist Russian
great power nationalism and White Russian emigre chauvinism had
already transformed and hardened Russian denial of the existence of
Ukraine and Ukrainians as a people, even prior to the 2014 crises
in Crimea and the Donbas. Bringing an end to both the Russian
occupation of Crimea and to the broader Russian-Ukrainian conflict
can be expected to meet obstacles not only from the Russian de
facto President-for-life, Vladimir Putin, but also from how Russia
perceives its national identity.
In 2000 a beheaded journalist was found in a remote forest near
Kyiv. The corpse led to a scandal when it was revealed that it was
that of a journalist critical of the authorities. The President was
heard on tapes, made covertly in his office, ordering violence to
be undertaken against the journalist. The scandal led to the
creation of a wide protest movement that culminated in the victory
of democratic opposition parties in 2002. The democratic
opposition, led by its presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko,
fought a bitter and fraudulent election campaign in 2004 during
which he was poisoned. Widespread election fraud led to Europe's
largest protest movement since the Cold War which became known as
the Orange Revolution, known after the campaign colour of the
democratic opposition. This book is the first to provide a
collection of studies surveying different aspects of the rise of
the Ukraine's democratic opposition from marginalization, to
protest against presidential abuse of office and culminating in the
Orange Revolution. It integrates the Kuchmagate crisis of 2000-2001
with that of the Orange Revolution four years later providing a
rich, detailed and original study of the origins of the Orange
Revolution. This book was published as a special issue of the
Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics.
Ukraine: State and Nation Building explores the transformation of
Soviet Ukraine into an independent state and examines the new
elites and their role in the state building process, as well as
other attributes of the modern nation-state such as borders,
symbols, myths and national histories. Extensive primary sources
and interviews with leading members of Ukranian elites, show that
state building is an integral part of the transition process and
cannot be divorced from democratization and the establishment of a
market economy.
A definitive contemporary political, economic, and cultural history
from a leading international expert, this is the first
single-volume work to survey and analyze Soviet and post-Soviet
Ukrainian history since 1953 as the basis for understanding the
nation today. Ukraine dominated international headlines as the
Euromaidan protests engulfed Ukraine in 2013-2014 and Russia
invaded the Crimea and the Donbas, igniting a new Cold War. Written
from an insider's perspective by the leading expert on Ukraine,
this book analyzes key domestic and external developments and
provides an understanding as to why the nation's future is central
to European security. In contrast with traditional books that
survey a millennium of Ukrainian history, author Taras Kuzio
provides a contemporary perspective that integrates the late Soviet
and post-Soviet eras. The book begins in 1953 when Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin died during the Cold War and carries the story to the
present day, showing the roots of a complicated transition from
communism and the weight of history on its relations with Russia.
It then goes on to examine in depth key aspects of Soviet and
post-Soviet Ukrainian politics; the drive to independence, Orange
Revolution, and Euromaidan protests; national identity; regionalism
and separatism; economics; oligarchs; rule of law and corruption;
and foreign and military policies. Moving away from a traditional
dichotomy of "good pro-Western" and "bad pro-Russian" politicians,
this volume presents an original framework for understanding
Ukraine's history as a series of historic cycles that represent a
competition between mutually exclusive and multiple identities.
Regionally diverse contemporary Ukraine is an outgrowth of multiple
historical Austrian-Hungarian, Polish, Russian, and especially
Soviet legacies, and the book succinctly integrates these
influences with post-Soviet Ukraine, determining the manner in
which political and business elites and everyday Ukrainians think,
act, operate, and relate to the outside world. Integrates
late-Soviet and post-Soviet history to explain the continuity of
the legacies of the USSR on contemporary Ukraine Provides
alternative and original insights into Ukrainian politics that
provide an original perspective different from standard frameworks
Includes an extensive range of interviews with leading Ukrainian
politicians, civic activists, and businesspersons as well as
Western policymakers and leaders of the Ukrainian diaspora who
provide unique insights into contemporary Ukrainian politics Shares
biographical entries that reflect the author's three decades of
personal involvement in contemporary Ukraine Draws on a wide range
of primary and original sources Features original and previously
unseen photographs
Ukraine: State and Nation Building explores the transformation of
Soviet Ukraine into an independent state and examines the new
elites and their role in the state building process, as well as
other attributes of the modern nation-state such as borders,
symbols, myths and national histories. Extensive primary sources
and interviews with leading members of Ukranian elites, show that
state building is an integral part of the transition process and
cannot be divorced from democratization and the establishment of a
market economy.
Nationalism remains one of the key political, societal, and
sociopsychological phenomena in contemporary Europe. Its
significance for the justification of state policies and the
stability of political systems, particularly in the context of
advanced democracies, and its significance for people's basic needs
for a political and cultural identity and a sense of national pride
continue to challenge scholars. The international scholars
assembled in this edited collection suggest that the use of three
perspectives supranationalism, boundary-making nationalism, and
regional nationalism may be promising as an explanatory framework
for the analysis of nationalism in Europe. The book's contributors
distance themselves from older dichotomies such as civic and ethnic
nationalism and questions the one-sided normativity of nationalism,
in particular in the concept of liberal nationalism. It argues that
a promising approach to contemporary nationalism should reflect the
multiplicity of nationalism. The volume is a collection of studies
by a multinational group of authors with backgrounds in Belgium,
Bulgaria, Canada, Germany, Latvia, New Zealand, Poland, Spain,
Ukraine and the United States."
In 2000 a beheaded journalist was found in a remote forest near
Kyiv. The corpse led to a scandal when it was revealed that it was
that of a journalist critical of the authorities. The President was
heard on tapes, made covertly in his office, ordering violence to
be undertaken against the journalist. The scandal led to the
creation of a wide protest movement that culminated in the victory
of democratic opposition parties in 2002. The democratic
opposition, led by its presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko,
fought a bitter and fraudulent election campaign in 2004 during
which he was poisoned. Widespread election fraud led to Europe's
largest protest movement since the Cold War which became known as
the Orange Revolution, known after the campaign colour of the
democratic opposition. This book is the first to provide a
collection of studies surveying different aspects of the rise of
the Ukraine's democratic opposition from marginalization, to
protest against presidential abuse of office and culminating in the
Orange Revolution. It integrates the Kuchmagate crisis of 2000-2001
with that of the Orange Revolution four years later providing a
rich, detailed and original study of the origins of the Orange
Revolution. This book was published as a special issue of the
Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics.
Exploring the post-Communist transition that has taken place in the
Ukraine, this text covers: nation and state building; national
identity and regionalism; politics and civil society; economic
transition; and security policy.
This volume brings together 15 articles divided into four
sections on the role of nationalism in transitions to democracy,
the application of theory to country case studies, and the role
played by history and myths in the forging of national identities
and nationalisms. The book develops new theories and frameworks
through engaging with leading scholars of nationalism: Hans Kohn's
propositions are discussed in relation to the applicability of the
term 'civic' (with no ethno-cultural connotations) to liberal
democracies, Rogers Brubaker over the usefulness of dividing
European states into 'civic' and 'nationalizing' states when the
former have historically been 'nationalizers', Will Kymlicka on the
applicability of multiculturalism to post-communist states, and
Paul Robert Magocsi on the lack of data to support claims of
revivals by national minorities in Ukraine. The book also engages
with 'transitology' over the usefulness of comparative studies of
transitions in regions that underwent only political reforms, and
those that had 'quadruple transitions', implying simultaneous
democratic and market reforms, as well as state and nation
building. A comparative study of Serbian and Russian diasporas
focuses on why ethnic Serbs and Russians living outside Serbia and
Russia reacted differently to the disintegration of Yugoslavia and
the USSR. The book dissects the writing of Russian and Soviet
history that continues to utilize imperial frameworks of history,
analyzes the re-writing of Ukrainian history within post-colonial
theories, and discusses the forging of Ukraine's identity within
theories of 'Others' as central to the shaping of identities. The
collection of articles proposes a new framework for the study of
Ukrainian nationalism as a broader research phenomenon by placing
nationalism in Ukraine within a theoretical and comparative
perspective.
Ukraine under Kuchma is the first survey of recent developments in
post-soviet Ukraine. The book covers in an in-depth manner the
entire range of key developments since the 1994 parliamentary and
presidential elections, the first elections held in post-soviet
Ukraine. The new era ushered in by these elections led to Ukraine's
launch of radical economic and political reforms which aim to
domestically dismantle soviet power within Ukraine, stabilise
relations with the separatist Crimean region and normalise
relations with Russia and the West.
Ukraine's 2004 presidential election was falsified, spurring the
Orange Revolution. To many observers, the Orange Revolution was a
shock, and the stolen election a recent development. However, both
the election fraud and the effort to topple the government of
Leonid Kuchma emerged from political dynamics that had appeared in
earlier Ukrainian elections.In this path breaking volume, leading
scholars place Ukraine's 2004 Orange Revolution in the longer
perspective of Ukraine's post-Soviet electoral politics. Covering
both presidential and parliamentary elections over the entire
post-Soviet period, the chapters clarify the manner in which
earlier elections had emerged as part of the battle for power in
Ukraine well before 2004. The opposition that came to power in 2004
had also won the 2002 elections and had developed its strategies
during opposition protests that had been catalyzed by the
Kuchmagate crisis in 2000. The evolution of the dynamics that led
to the fraudulent 2004 election reveals that the events of 2004
represented continuity as well as change. By placing the 2004
elections within a longer trajectory, the volume enriches our
understanding of the Orange Revolution and helps us to understand
the difficulties faced in consolidating Ukraine's democratic
breakthrough following the Orange Revolution.The volume contains an
introduction to "Aspects of the Orange Revolution I-VI" by Andreas
Umland, followed by eight chapters by Robert K. Christensen, Edward
R. Rakhimkulov and Charles Wise, Paul D'Anieri, Robert Kravchuk and
Victor Chudowsky, Paul Kubicek, Taras Kuzio, Lucan Way, and Anna
Makhorkina. These authors bring complex and varied perspectives
that situate Ukraine's post-Soviet elections in economic reforms,
constitutional law, foreign policy objectives of integrating into
Europe, as well as in the broader context of the rough and tumble
competition for political control of Ukraine.
Post-communist democratic revolutions have, so far, taken place
in six countries: Slovakia (1998), Croatia (1999-2000), Serbia
(2000), Georgia (2003), Ukraine (2004), and Kyrgyzstan (2005). The
seven chapters in this volume situate these events within a
theoretical and comparative perspective. The book draws upon
extensive experience and field research conducted by political
scientists specializing in comparative democratization, regime
politics, political transitions, electoral studies, and the
post-communist world. The papers by Valerie Bunce and Sharon
Wolchik, Henry Hale, Paul D'Anieri, David R. Marples, Taras Kuzio,
Lucan A. Way and Steven Levitsky as well as Anika Locke Binnendijk
and Ivan Marovic explore different regime types and opposition
strategies in post-communist states, the diffusion of opposition
strategies between states in which democratic revolutions were
attempted, the strategic importance of youth NGO's in mobilizing
oppositions towards democratic revolutions, the use of non-violent
strategies by the opposition, path dependent, theoretical and
comparative explanations of the sources of successful and failed
democratic revolutions, and the factors that lie behind divergent
post-revolutionary trajectories.The volume represents a
breakthrough in our understanding of why and how democratic
revolutions take place in the post-communist world. It provides an
integrated analysis of why such upheavals succeed in some, but fail
in other states. The contributions point to, among other issues,
why the post-revolutionary breakthroughs in Serbia, Ukraine, and
Kyrgyzstan have encountered obstacles, the ousted regime was never
fully defeated and its representatives were able to launch
counter-revolutions, as well as why, in Serbia and Ukraine, the
political forces of the ousted regimes have returned to power in
free elections held after democratic revolutions. "Post-Communist
Democratic Revolutions in Comparative Perspective" is essential
reading for scholars and policy makers alike.
The Crimea was the only region of Ukraine in the 1990s where
separatism arose and inter-ethnic conflict potentially could have
taken place between the Ukrainian central government, ethnic
Russians in the Crimea, and Crimean Tatars. Such a conflict would
have inevitably drawn in Russia and Turkey. Russia had large
numbers of troops in the Crimea within the former Soviet Black Sea
Fleet. Ukraine also was a nuclear military power until 1996. This
book analyses two inter-related issues. Firstly, it answers the
question why Ukraine-Crimea-Russia traditionally have been a
triangle of conflict over a region that Ukraine, Tatars and Russia
have historically claimed. Secondly, it explains why inter-ethnic
violence was averted in Ukraine despite Crimea possessing many of
the ingredients that existed for Ukraine to follow in the footsteps
of inter-ethnic strife in its former Soviet neighbourhood in
Moldova (Trans-Dniestr), Azerbaijan (Nagorno Karabakh), Georgia
(Abkhazia, South Ossetia), and Russia (Chechnya).
This book tells us about how Russia fought against journalists and
the freedom of speech during the occupation of Crimea and
thereafter. Yuriy Lukanov, a journalist who covered these events,
describes not only his own impressions, but present us also many
interviews he conducted with journalists who worked in Crimea at
that time.The book shows that how Russia systematically fought
against free press and free reporting--from simple restriction of
access to information to physical beatings and criminal prosecution
of journalist. The volume is illustrated with photos by the author
and his colleagues. With a foreword by Taras Kuzio.
The papers presented in this volume analyze the civil uprising
known as Euromaidan that began in central Kyiv in late November
2013, when the Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych opted not to
sign an Association Agreement with the European Union, and
continued over the following months. The topics include the
motivations and expectations of protesters, organized crime,
nationalism, gender issues, mass media, the Russian language, and
the impact of Euromaidan on Ukrainian politics as well as on the
EU, Russia, and Belarus. An epilogue to the book looks at the
aftermath, including the Russian annexation of Crimea and the
creation of breakaway republics in the east, leading to full-scale
conflict. The goal of the book is less to offer a definitive
account than one that represents a variety of aspects of a mass
movement that captivated world attention and led to the downfall of
the Yanukovych presidency.
Ukraine played a key role in the dissolution of the former USSR,
and its continued independence will have a decisive impact upon the
transformation of Russia itself into either a new empire or Western
democracy. The economic crisis and mismanagement that engulfed
Ukraine during 1993 through 1994 led many in the West and among
Ukraine's neighbors to question the country's long-term viability
as an independent state. In 1995 Ukraine has entered a new era
reflecting its importance as a linchpin of regional security and
stability in Europe. This study discusses Ukrainian security
policies and their implications for Western policy. It makes a
compelling case for greater Western aid and political support for
Ukrainian independence and territorial integrity.
The papers presented in this volume analyze the civil uprising
known as Euromaidan that began in central Kyiv in late November
2013, when the Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych opted not to
sign an Association Agreement with the European Union, and
continued over the following months. The topics include the
motivations and expectations of protesters, organized crime,
nationalism, gender issues, mass media, the Russian language, and
the impact of Euromaidan on Ukrainian politics as well as on the
EU, Russia, and Belarus. The goal of the book is less to offer a
definitive account than one that represents a variety of aspects of
a mass movement that captivated world attention and led to the
downfall of the Yanukovych presidency. The authors comprise well
known and younger scholars who work on contemporary Ukraine and its
neighbors.
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
Not available
|