Ethnic Conflict in the Former Soviet Union
Project (Completed)1994-2005
Investigators
Gail W. Lapidus - Stanford University
While the dissolution of the Soviet Union diminished the threat of nuclear and conventional warfare on which the postwar alliance system rested, the disruptive consequences of the major political, economic and social transformations sweeping the region have created a variety of new threats to regional security. CISAC scholars work with colleagues in the former Soviet states to find new approaches to these conflicts.
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Publications
Records 1-11 of 19Sort by Year | Title
War in Chechnya as a Paradigm of Russian State-Building Under Putin, The
Gail W. Lapidus
Post-Soviet Affairs vol. 20, 1 (2004)
Between Dictatorship and Democracy: Russian Post-Communist Political Reform
Michael A. McFaul, Nikolai Petrov, Andrei Ryabov
Washington Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (2004)

Russia's Transformation and American Policy
Gail W. Lapidus, Robert J. Lieber
Prentice Hall, in "Eagle Rules? Foreign Policy and American Primacy in the Twenty-First Century" (2002)
Accommodating Ethnic Differences in Post-Soviet Eurasia
Gail W. Lapidus, Crawford Young, Mark Beissinger
Woodrow Wilson Center and Johns Hopkins University Press in "Beyond State Crisis? Post-Colonial Africa and Post-Soviet Eurasia in Comparative Perspective" (2002)
Putin's War on Terrorism: Lessons From Chechnya
Gail W. Lapidus
Post-Soviet Affairs vol. 18, 1 (2002)
State-Building and State Breakdown in Russia
Gail W. Lapidus, Archie Brown
Oxford University Press in "Contemporary Russian Politics: A Reader" (2001)
Russia's Second Chechen War: Ten Assumptions in Search of a Policy
Gail W. Lapidus
The Swedish Institute of International Affairs (Stockholm) (2000)
- Assymetrical Federalism and Russian State-Building
Gail W. Lapidus
Post-Soviet Affairs (formerly Soviet Economy). Article republished in "Federalism in Russia" by Kazan Inst of Federalism, Tatarstan, 2002 vol. 15 (1999)
The War in Chechnya: Opportunities Missed, Lessons to be Learned
Gail W. Lapidus
Rowman and Littlefield (1999)
Dynamics of Secession in the Russian Federation: Why Chechnya?, in Stephen Hanson and Mikhail Alexseev, A Federation Imperiled: Center-Periphery Conflict in Post-Soviet Russia, The
Gail W. Lapidus
Palgrave-MacMillan in "Center-Periphery Conflict in Post-Soviet Russia", ed. M. Alexseev. (1999)
- Geopolitics of Energy Development in the Caspian Region: Regional Cooperation or Conflict?, The
Vadim Rubin
CISAC (1999)



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