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 12-19 of 19Sort by Year | Title
Contested Sovereignty: The Tragedy of Chechnya
Gail W. Lapidus
International Security vol. 23, 1 (1998)
- Caucasus Working Papers: Georgia - The Search for State Security; European Security and Conflict Resolution in the Transcaucasus
David Darchiashvili, Nerses Mkrttchian
CISAC (1997)
Nationalism, Regionalism and Federalism: Dilemmas of State-Building in Post-Communist Russia
Gail W. Lapidus, Edward W. Walker
Westview Press in "The New Russia: Troubled Transformation" (1994)
New Russia: Troubled Transformation, The
Gail W. Lapidus
Westview Press (1994)
- Ethnonationalism and Political Stability: The Soviet Case
Gail W. Lapidus
Westview Press in "The Soviet Nationality Reader: The Disintegration in Context (1992)
- From Union to Commonwealth: Nationalism and Separatism in the Soviet Republics
Gail W. Lapidus, Victor Zaslavsky, Philip Goldman
Cambridge University Press (1992)
- The Structural Context of Soviet Ethno-Nationalism
Gail W. Lapidus
Theory and Society: Renewal and Critique in Social Theory vol. 20, 5 (1991)
- Gorbachev and the "National Question": Restructuring the Soviet Federation
Gail W. Lapidus
Soviet Economy vol. 5 (1989)



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