Migration and Social Upheaval as the Face of Globalization in Central Asia

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Since the start of the 1990s, Central Asia has been the main purveyor of migrants in the post-Soviet space. These massive migrations due to social upheavals over the last twenty years impact issues of governance; patterns of social adaptation; individual and collective identities; and gender relations in Central Asia. This volume raises the importance of internal migrations, those at a regional, intra-Central Asian, level, labor migrations to Russia, and carries us as far away to the Uzbek migrants based in Istanbul, New York, or Seoul, as well as to the young women of Tashkent who head to Germany or France, and to the Germans, Greeks, and Jews of Central Asia who have returned to their “ethnic homelands”.
Contributors include Aida Aaly Alimbaeva, Stéphanie Belouin, Adeline Braux, Asel Dolotkeldieva, Olivier Ferrando, Sophie Hohmann, Nafisa Khusenova, Erica Marat, Sophie Massot, Saodat Olimova, Sébastien Peyrouse, Luisa Piart, Madeleine Reeves, Elena Sadovskaya.

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Preliminary Material
Editor(s): Marlene Laruelle
Pages: i–vii
About the Authors
Editor(s): Marlene Laruelle
Pages: 1–4
Introduction
Pages: 17–22
Introduction
Pages: 109–116
Introduction
Pages: 209–214
Introduction
Pages: 301–306
Bibliography
Editor(s): Marlene Laruelle
Pages: 397–408
Index
Editor(s): Marlene Laruelle
Pages: 409–413
Marlene Laruelle is Director of the Central Asia Program, and Research Professor, The Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies (IERES), George Washington University. Her main areas of research are political and social evolutions, identity issues, nationalism, citizenship and migration in Russia and Central Asia.
"This volume provides a thought provoking and richly detailed assessment of key migration issues in Central Asia. Included contributions address the valuable resilience labor migration provides to family budgets and regime stability across Central Asia, while also highlighting the risks of migration reliance in term of dependence on foreign labor markets and global economic shifts. Both the inclusion of leading scholars from Central Asia and the quality of the field-based insights across the chapters make this a uniquely valuable volume, whose contributions add to our understanding of macro issues related to regional development and micro issues linked to gender and social expectations. Covering key topics in Economics, Anthropology, Political Science and Sociology the collection will be of importance to a wide community of scholars interested in issues of migration and development within Central Asia and across the globe."
– Cynthia Buckley, Professor of Sociology, The University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
All those interested in migration studies, globalization studies, post-Soviet and Eurasian studies, Asian studies.
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