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Post-Soviet Central Asia - JTM275
Anglický název: Post-Soviet Central Asia
Český název: Postsovětská Střední Asie
Zajišťuje: Katedra ruských a východoevropských studií (23-KRVS)
Fakulta: Fakulta sociálních věd
Platnost: od 2023
Semestr: zimní
E-Kredity: 6
Způsob provedení zkoušky: zimní s.:kombinovaná
Rozsah, examinace: zimní s.:1/1, Zk [HT]
Počet míst: 26 / neurčen (15)
Minimální obsazenost: neomezen
4EU+: ne
Virtuální mobilita / počet míst pro virtuální mobilitu: ne
Stav předmětu: vyučován
Jazyk výuky: angličtina
Způsob výuky: prezenční
Způsob výuky: prezenční
Poznámka: předmět je možno zapsat mimo plán
povolen pro zápis po webu
při zápisu přednost, je-li ve stud. plánu
Garant: doc. PhDr. Slavomír Horák, Ph.D.
Mgr. Anna Jordanová
Vyučující: Mgr. Anna Jordanová
Třída: Courses for incoming students
Neslučitelnost : JMM361, JMM703
Anotace - angličtina
The course “Post-Soviet Central Eurasia” gives the students a solid understanding of the nation-building processes in the Central Asian region since the fall of the Soviet Union. The nation-building process consists of three interrelated parts:
a) the establishment of a political system and the constitution of informal political elites that enable the exercise of state power,
b) the creation of national identity and ideology and
c) the economic as well as the social transformation.

Students will receive a comprehensive overview and will be able to comprehend critical issues in Central Asian internal politics.

Poslední úprava: Jordanová Anna, Mgr. (12.09.2023)
Cíl předmětu - angličtina

Learning outcomes

Specific knowledge:

The students will gain a more profound understanding of Central Asia as a geographic area and its challenges on the road to progress and modernization, especially the multi-dimensional character of modernization and its components.

 

Transferable skills:

Capacity for logical inference, analytical thinking and generalization are crucial at the master’s level. Two midterm tests with the so-called open-ended questions will contribute to developing these qualities, which will be further reinforced by preparing a presentation.

In the learning process, students are expected to sharpen their skills in conducting the discussion, delivering a presentation and drafting a piece in argumentative writing. Students should behave cooperatively and be mutually supportive to achieve these skills (especially the former two).

 

Values:

After completing the course, students will clearly understand scholars/analysts’ academic responsibility towards society.

Poslední úprava: Jordanová Anna, Mgr. (12.09.2023)
Podmínky zakončení předmětu - angličtina

Grading is based on the Dean's Measure no. 20/2019: https://fsv.cuni.cz/deans-measure-no-20/2019

  • 91% and more   => A
  • 81-90%             => B
  • 71-80%             => C
  • 61-70%             => D
  • 51-60%             => E
  • 0-50%               => F

More in SMĚRNICE S_SO_002: Organizace zkouškových termínů, kontrol studia a užívání klasifikace A–F na FSV UK.

Poslední úprava: Lochmanová Sára, Bc. (05.10.2023)
Literatura - angličtina

Other websites and media worth following:
Central Asian Bureau for Analytical Reporting: https://cabar.asia
Central Asian Analytical Network: www.caa-network.org
Eurasianet: eurasianet.org
The Third Pole: thethirdpole.net
Majlis Podcast: https://www.rferl.org/majlis-talking-asia-podcast
Vlast.kz: https://vlast.kz/english/ (English, Russian)

Weekly readings are marked in the syllabus.
Other recommended readings for the semester (available in the files):
Anceschi, Luca. Analysing Kazakhstan's Foreign Policy Regime neo-Eurasianism in the Nazarbaev era. Routledge 2020.
Bukharbayeva, Bagila. The Vanishing Generation: Faith and Uprising in Modern Uzbekistan. Indiana University Press, 2019
Cooley, Alexander. Great Games, Local Rules: The New Great Power Contest in Central Asia, 2012.
Frankopan, Peter. The New Silk Roads: The Present and Future of the World, 2018.
Kassenova, Togzhan. Atomic Steppe How Kazakhstan Gave Up the Bomb, 2022.
Laruelle, M., & Peyrouse, S. Globalizing central Asia: geopolitics and the challenges of economic development. M.E. Sharpe, 2012.
Lottholz, Philipp. Post-Liberal Statebuilding in Central Asia  Imaginaries, Discourses and Practices of Social Ordering, 2022.
Pantucci, Raffaello and Petersen Alexandros. Sinostan: China's Inadvertent Empire, 2022.
Spector, Regine. Order at the Bazaar: Power and Trade in Central Asia. Ithaca, 2017.

A reading/introductory list in those more interested in Central Asian studies specifically: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1aoBW3UFW86YiKYkTroW1-VOKR8xjIbb8qjMSGGqmOGw/edit

Poslední úprava: Jordanová Anna, Mgr. (28.08.2024)
Metody výuky - angličtina

The course is a combination of seminars discussions based on essential readings and comments by the lecturer and presentations on the texts developing the topic with specific case studies. According to IMS regulations the classes take place at Pekarska building (unless new measures are introduced - see IMS website for updates).

Poslední úprava: Horák Slavomír, doc. PhDr., Ph.D. (30.09.2021)
Požadavky ke zkoušce - angličtina
Final interview (45%)
Final interview with each student based on the readings and in-class topics.

One short presentation: (45%)
A short presentation could be based on presentation suggestions and additional assigned readings marked "Additional readings". The presenter is not
expected to re-narrate the content of the text but should provide a broader context of the text, consequences or implications for contemporary research.
However, the student can propose and present his/her own topic (relevant to the class topic and subject to the lecturer's preliminary approval).
Each student is responsible for researching sources for the presentation based on scientific articles, analysis and other relevant texts.
The presentation should last approximately 15 mins, i.e. the topic should be picked accordingly (narrow enough). More than two presentations per one
class will not be allowed.
Registration for presentations: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1NZAUZVq5KZl1lUCMSfk2_-6u2v5dHt4A_TzLovg3a34/edit?usp=sharing

Activity in the class (10%)
Consists of active participation in debates and discussions.

Assessment
(A) 100 - 91%
(B) 90 - 81%
(C) 80 - 71%
(D) 70 – 61%
(E) 60 – 51%
(F) less than 50%
Poslední úprava: Jordanová Anna, Mgr. (07.10.2023)
Sylabus - angličtina

1. Concepts, Geography, Demography, Society (3.10.)

Key topics: Central Asia: Eurasian pivot, black hole, or neither? Different concepts and approaches of the region. Geographical parts of the region.

Readings:

(read at least 2 out of 3 readings)

Bruno J. De Cordier and Jeroen J.J. Van den Bosch: Defining and Delineating Central Asia from a European Perspective. European Handbook of Central Asian Studies. History, Politics, and Society (Jeroen Van den Bosch - Adrien Fauve - Bruno de Cordier), Ibidem Verlag, Stuttgart, 2021, p. 13-38.
Available: https://www.ibidem.eu/en/the-european-handbook-of-central-asian-studies-9783838215181.html

Cummings, Sally. „Understanding Central Asia: Politics and Contested Transformations“. Routledge, 2013 (Chapter 2).
Available: Jinonice library.

Clarke, Michael. „The centrality of Central Asia in world history 1700-2008. From Pivot to Periphery and Back Again?“ China, Xinjiang and Central Asia. History, transition and crossborder interaction into 21st century (Mackerass, Colin - Clarke Michael, eds.). Routledge, 2009: 21-54.
Available in the package and e-databases, libraries.

Presentation readings:

Mackinder, Halford John. "The geographical pivot of history." Geographical Journal 170.4 (2004): 298-321.
Available in the package.

Starr, S. Frederick. In Defense of Greater Central Asia. Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program, 2008. Available online.

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2. To what extent “post-Soviet”? (10.10).

Key topics: What remains from the Soviet era? Commonalities and differences.

Readings: Gorshenina, Svetlana: Orientalism, Postcolonial and Decolonial Frames on Central Asia: Theoretical Relevance and Applicability. European Handbook of Central Asian Studies. History, Politics, and Society (Jeroen Van den Bosch - Adrien Fauve - Bruno de Cordier, eds.), Ibidem Verlag, Stuttgart, 2021, p. 175-244.
Available online: https://www.ibidem.eu/en/the-european-handbook-of-central-asian-studies-9783838215181.html

alternatively:

Lewis, David. „Sovereignty after Empire: The Colonial Roots of Central Asian Authoritarianism“. Sovereignty After Empire. Comparing the Middle East and Central Asia. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 2011: 178-196. + Dadabaev, Timur. "Evaluations of perestroika in post-Soviet Central Asia: Public views in contemporary Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan." Communist and Post-Communist Studies 49 (2016): 179-192. Both available in the package.

Additional readings:

Horák, Slavomír. "Turkmenistan at the Last Stage of Perestroika. Determinants of an Authoritarian Path." Cahiers d’Asie centrale 26 (2016): 29-49.
Available: https://journals.openedition.org/asiecentrale/3227 

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3. Formal and informal power institutions in Central Asia (17.10.)

Key topics: Should political scientists analyze formal or rather informal institutions? Why the leader is so important in (not only) Central Asian politics? Are there „traditional“, „Soviet“ and „contemporary“ elites? Do institutions matter at all?

Readings:

European Handbook of Central Asian Studies. History, Politics, and Society (Jeroen Van den Bosch - Adrien Fauve - Bruno de Cordier), Ibidem Verlag, Stutgart, 2021 (open access book), Chapter 9 (p. 327-361) and Chapter 11 (385-448)
Available online: https://www.ibidem.eu/en/the-european-handbook-of-central-asian-studies-9783838215181.html 
Ismailbekova, Aksana. Native son Japarov: The embodiment of injustice? Anthropology Today 37.5. (2021): 14-17. Available in the package.

Presentation suggestion:

Analysis of a selected case from Central Asian informal structures 

Additional readings:

Horák, Slavomír. „The Elite in Post-Soviet and Post-Niyazow Turkmenistan: Does Political Culture Form a Leader?“ Demokratizatsiya, 20.4 (2012): 371-385.
Norling, Nicklas. „Party Problems and Factionalism in Soviet Uzbekistan. Evidence from the Communist Party Archives“. Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program. 2017: 98-123. Available online.
Peyrouse, Sebastien. „The Kazakh Neopatrimonial Regime: Balancing Uncertainties among the "Family", Oligarchs and Technocrats“. 
Demokratizatsiya, 20.4 (2012): 345-370. Available in the package.
Ismailbekova, Aksana. "Informal Governance, 'Clan' Politics and Corruption. In: Routledge Handbook of Central Asia, Routledge, 2021,: 87-100 (Available online)

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4. NO LECTURE (24.10)

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5. Regime transition models in Central Asia (31.10).

Key Topics: Analysis of regime transitions in Central Asia (cases of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan). Is there a potential of „Arab Springs“/"Colour revolutions" in Central Asia (particularly Kyrgyzstan)? Specifics of hereditary grooming in Central Asian states (example of Azerbaijan, cases of Turkmenistan and Tajikistan). Legitimization of new leaders.

Readings

Ambrosio, Thomas. Leadership Succession in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan: Regime Survival after Nazarbayev and Karimov. Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies, 17.1 (2014): 49-67. + Horák, Slavomir. "Leadership Succession in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan: Between Stability and Instability." Central Asian Affairs 5.1 (2018): 1-15. Both available in e-databases and in the package.

Presentation suggestions

Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and/or Kazakhstan hereditary grooming/leader transitions (camparative perspectives)

Kazakhstan Transition process 2019-2022; From Bloody January to "New Republic"

The cases of a selected transitions in Central Asia (Tajikistan 1992, Turkmenistan 2006, Uzbekistan 2016, Kazakhstan 2019-2022, Turkmenistan 2022)

Additional readings

Kudaibergenova Diana T. – Laruelle, Marlene. Making sense of the January 2022 protests in Kazakhstan: failing legitimacy, culture of protests, and elite readjustments. Post-Soviet Affairs, 2022. Available in the package and in e-databases.

Isaacs, Rico: Charismatic Routinization and Problems of Post-Charisma Succession in Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Studies of Transition States and Societies, Vol. 7 (2015), Issue 1, p. 58-76. Available in the package and in e-databases.

Polese, Abel - Ó Beacháin, Donnacha – Horák, Slavomír: Strategies of legitimation in Central Asia: regime durability in Turkmenistan. Contemporary Politics, 23:4 (2017): 427-445. Available in the package and in e-databases.

Hug, Adam et al.: Spotlight on Uzbekistan. The Foreign Policy Center, 2020 (chapter 1).
Available: https://fpc.org.uk/publications/spotlight-on-uzbekistan/

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6. Regional cooperation and (trans)regional institutions in Central Asia: does it matter?  (7.11)

Key topics: Why Central Asia is not integrated from within? Could outside powers integrate Central Asia?

Readings:

Pataccini, Leonardo - Malikov, Numonjon. "Transition and Regional Cooperation in Central Asia: What Can They Tell Us about the (Post-) Liberal World Order?" Polity, Vol. 52, No. 2, 2020, p. 288-303. Available in the databases and in the package.
Krapohl, Sebastian, and Alexandra Vasileva-Dienes. "The region that isn't: China, Russia and the failure of regional integration in Central Asia."
Asia Europe Journal, Vol. 18, No. 3, 2020, p. 347-366. Available in the databases and in the package.

Presentation suggestions:
Do Central Asian countries want integration or cooperation?
Each state has different priorities: From Turkmenistan's isolation to Uzbekistan's drive.
Russia, China and Turkey: external integration concepts in Central Asia after 2022.

Additional readings:

Ambrosio, Thomas: „Catching the ‘Shanghai Spirit’: How the Shanghai Cooperation Organization Promotes Authoritarian Norms in Central Asia“. Europe-Asia Studies, 60.8 (2008): 1321-1344. Available in the databases and in the package.

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7. Economic and social transformation of Central Asia (14.11)

Key topics: Shock changes versus gradual transformation. Different Strategies, similar outputs in Central Asia - and the interplay between regimes, economies and international partners. When the prosperous economy is (not) the priority? 

Readings:

Pomfret, Richard: The Central Asian Economies in the Twenty-First Century. Paving a New Silk Road. Princeton University Press, 2019 (chapters 2 and 3). Available in e-databases and in the package.

Pomfret, Richard: Economic Reform and Development in Central Asia. Routledge Handbook of Central Asian Studies. Routledge, 2021, p. 281-302. (available online)

Presentation suggestions:

Economic Reform and Institutional Change in Central Asia (case of selected countries)

The analysis of gradualism versus shock therapy in the transformation of Central Asian economies (coparative cases of Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan)

The application of "Dutch disease" concept (or other concept) on the economy of energy rich countries in Central Asia (cases of Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan)

The (non-)transformation from "kolkhozes and sovkhozes" to farmer's system in Central Asian agriculture (cases of Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan)

The water system of Central Asia (the impact of Rogun or Kambarata dams for upstream and downstream states, the new water canal built by Taliban).

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8. Russia and beyond Russia: China, the West, Turkey and the others. (21.11)

Key topics: Foreign and domestic policy of Central Asian states during the three decades of sovereignty. Alternative partners: immediate neighborhood and more distant partners. Problem of dependence and independence.

Readings:
Kazantsev, Andrei, Medvedeva, Svetlana and Safranchuk, Ivan. Between Russia and China: Central Asia in Greater Eurasia. Journal of Eurasian Studies 2021, Vol. 12(1) 57–71. Available in the package.
Bossuyt, Fabienne and Dessein, Bart. The European Union, China and Central Asia Global and Regional Cooperation in A New Era. Routledge 2022. Chapters 5 and 12 (others recommended). Available in the package. 

Presentation suggestions:
Zero-sum competition or complementary cooperation? Western expectations versus local priorities.

Additional readings:
Umarov, Akram et. al. New foreign policy of Uzbekistan: Central Asia, the EAEU and the BRI. GCRF COMPASS Policy paper. 2020. Available in the package.
How Rising Great Power Tensions Will Affect Central Asia. FPRI 2021. Available in the package.

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9. Transport in Central Asia (28.11.)

Key Topics: Central Asia as Eurasian transport hub or Eurasian bypass? Factors and determinants of Central Asia as a transit destination. One Belt One Road and its impact on Central Asia. The future of the trans-Caspian corridor and other "alternatives".

Readings:

Starr, Frederick – Cornell, Svante – Norling, Nicklas: The EU, Central Asia and the Development of  Continental Transport and Trade. Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program, Washington – Stockholm, 2015. Available online.
Peyrouse, Sebastien, and Gaël Raballand. "Central Asia: the new Silk Road initiative’s questionable economic rationality." Eurasian Geography and Economics 56.4 (2015): 405-420. Available in the package.

Presentation suggestions:

Belt and Road Initiative in the transport

The Middle Corridor in Kazakhstan after the Russian invasion in the Ukraine

Internal barriers as an obstacle for rail/road transport in the region. The case of Kyrgyzstan.
Forever projects: TAPI and other failures.

Additional readings:
Luca Anceschi (2017) Turkmenistan and the virtual politics of Eurasian energy: the case of the TAPI pipeline project, Central Asian Survey, 36:4, 409-429. Available in the package. 
Kassen, Maxat. Understanding foreign policy strategies of Kazakhstan: a case study of the landlocked and transcontinental country. Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 2018 Vol. 31, Nos. 3–4, 314–343. Available in the package.

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10. Conflict potential and the so-called Islamic threat in Central Asia (5.12.)

Key Topics: Myth or reality of Islamic extremism in Central Asia. Real and imagined conflicts in the region. Central Asians and the conflict in Afghanistan

Readings

(at least 2)

Routledge Handbook of Central Asia (Erica Marat and Rico isaacs, eds.). Routledge, 2021, (Chapter 27 and 28) p. 411-436. Available online.
Reeves, Madeleine. Border Work : Spatial Lives of the State in Rural Central Asia. Cornell University Press; 2014. Chapter 6: separations (others recommended). Available in the package.

Falkowski, Maciej – Lang, Josef. Homo Jihadicus. Islam in the Former USSR and the Phenomenon of the Post-Soviet Militants in Syria and Iraq. OSW Report, Warsaw, 2015 (Chapter I, II and VII). Available: http://aei.pitt.edu/69197/1/homojihadicus.pdf.

Tishkov, Valery. „Ethnic Conflicts in the Former USSR. The Use and Misuese of Typologies and Datas“. Journal of Peace Research, 36.5 (1999): 571-591.

Presentation suggestions:

Islam in Central Asia: between rising faith and persisting security prism.

The Origins of Civil War In Tajikistan and its impact on contemporary political system in Tajikistan

Scarce (water) resources becoming even more scarce. The conflict inevitable?

Tajik-Kyrgyz conflict, Karakalpak events 2022, GBAO 2022-2023. Utilization of conflict and interpretation differences.

Additional reardings:
Lenz-Raymann, Kathrin. Securitization of Islam. A Vicious Circle: Counter-Terrorism and Freedom of Religion in Central Asia. Transcript Verlag, 2014. Available in the package.
Kłyszcz, Ivan Ulises. Gorno-Badakhshan and Karakalpakstan since 1991: understanding territorial autonomy in Central Asia, Central Asian Survey, 42:3 (2023): 500-517. Available in the package.

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11. Central Asia after the Russian invasion of Ukraine (12.12.)

Key topics: Laying low and grasping opportunity? Multivectorism, seeking alternatives and strategic silence in practice.

Readings:
Kassenova, Nargis. Central Asia's Balancing Act. Online. Asia policy. 2023, 18(2), p. 20-29. Available in the package.

Tolipov, F., 2015. Strategic Implications of the War in Ukraine for the Post-Soviet Space. Connections. The quarterly journal (English ed.), 14(4), pp.11-20. (for interpretation and discussion). Available in the package.
Pannier, Bruce. How Moscow’s War In Ukraine Is Changing Russian-Central Asian Relations? Majlis podcast, February 26, 2023. Available online. 


Presentation suggestions: Reactions of specific Central Asian states to the invasion; commonalities, differences, priorities.

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12. New debates in Central Asia: Current topics and problems. (spare lecture: discussion on topics emerged during the semester) (19.12.)

Readings: TBA

Presentation suggestions: N/A

 

Poslední úprava: Jordanová Anna, Mgr. (03.10.2024)
 
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