Of Decision-Making: Understanding Kazakhstan's Foreign Policy in the Early Independence Period (1991-4)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Of Decision-Making: Understanding Kazakhstan's Foreign Policy in the Early Independence Period (1991-4) View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by St Andrews Research Repository INDEPENDENT KAZAKHSTAN AND THE 'BLACK BOX' OF DECISION-MAKING : UNDERSTANDING KAZAKHSTAN'S FOREIGN POLICY IN THE EARLY INDEPENDENCE PERIOD (1991-4) Anuar Ayazbekov A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of PhD at the University of St Andrews 2014 Full metadata for this item is available in Research@StAndrews:FullText at: http://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/ Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/4895 This item is protected by original copyright Independent Kazakhstan and the 'Black Box' of Decision-Making: Understanding Kazakhstan's Foreign Policy in the Early Independence Period (1991-4) Anuar Ayazbekov Thesis submitted to the School of International Relations at the University of St. Andrews in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of PhD 16 December 2013 1. Candidate's declarations I, Anuar Ayazbekov, hereby certify that this thesis, which is approximately 80000 words in length, has been written by me, that it is the record of work carried out by me and that it has not been submitted in any previous application for a higher degree. I was admitted as a research student in September, 2009 and as a candidate for the degree of PhD in September, 2009; the higher study for which this is a record was carried out in the University of St Andrews between 2009 and 2013. I, Anuar Ayazbekov, received assistance in the writing of this thesis in respect of language and grammar, which was provided by Simon Taylor. Date …… Signature of candidate ……… 2. Supervisor's declarations I, Professor Sally N. Cummings, hereby certify that the candidate has fulfilled the conditions of the Resolution and Regulations appropriate for the degree of PhD in the University of St Andrews and that the candidate is qualified to submit this thesis in application for that degree. Date …… Signature of supervisor ……… 3. Permission for electronic publication In submitting this thesis to the University of St Andrews I understand that I am giving permission for it to be made available for use in accordance with the regulations of the University Library for the time being in force, subject to any copyright vested in the work not being affected thereby. I also understand that the title and the abstract will be published, and that a copy of the work may be made and supplied to any bona fide library or research worker, that my thesis will be electronically accessible for personal or research use unless exempt by award of an embargo as requested below, and that the library has the right to migrate my thesis into new electronic forms as required to ensure continued access to the thesis. I have obtained any third-party copyright permissions that may be required in order to allow such access and migration, or have requested the appropriate embargo below. The following is an agreed request by candidate and supervisor regarding the electronic publication of this thesis: Access to printed copy and electronic publication of thesis through the University of St Andrews. Date …… Signature of candidate …… Signature of supervisor ……… ii Acknowledgements I would like to express my gratitude to the people and institutions in Saint Andrews, Almaty, and Astana, whose support made this research endeavour possible. I am thankful to the Government of the Republic of Kazakhstan that granted me the Presidential Scholarship “Bolashak,” which covered my tuition fees and other expenses for the duration of the doctoral programme. I am indebted to my supervisor, Professor Sally N. Cummings, a true scholar and mentor, whose continuous academic support and encouragement was instrumental. I am grateful to my parents and my sister for their care and support. Elvin, Dastan, Ilyas, Asset, Maxim, Nicola and other friends made my non-academic life a much more enjoyable experience. It was also for the School’s Postgraduate Secretary Mrs. Mary Kettle’s kind assistance that my administrative matters were conveniently taken care of. Also, it was for the professionalism of the staff of the president’s archive in Almaty that the work on primary documents went so smoothly. I am also thankful to a fellow researcher, Ms. Dena Sholk, who kindly provided much needed advice on referencing at the submission stage. I am truly grateful to my wife Didara, who bore with me during the most pressing final stages of dissertation work. Finally, I would also like to acknowledge Dr. Maulen Ashimbayev who opened for me a path to research career, Dr. Makhmud Kasymbekov for the encouragement and valuable advices, and Dr. Murat Laumulin whose works and ideas inspired my academic curiosity. iii To Yermek and Raushan iv Abstract This thesis presents a foreign policy decision-making analysis of Kazakhstan’s foreign relations in the initial post-independence period. The study applies a neoclassical realist theoretical framework in order to provide the understanding of Kazakhstan’s external behaviour. The thesis conceptually assumes that the integration of the presidential decision-making element in the analysis of the republic’s foreign policy is essential to account for Kazakhstan’s foreign strategies, which would otherwise appear to be anomalous from the deterministic perspective of the structural theories of international relations. The set objective of the work is to produce a theoretically informed historical narratives of Almaty’s policymaking during three episodes in the republic’s diplomatic history – the elaboration of a distinct balancing strategy; the relinquishment of the nuclear arsenal; and the Nagorno-Karabakh peace mission. The reconstruction of events behind the decisions made by president Nursultan Nazarbayev and his key advisors through the assessment of primary materials sourced from the archives of Kazakhstani foreign policy demonstrates that foreign decision-making process played a crucial role in the identification of national interests and development of appropriate policy responses in each of the episodes under examination. Chapter IV illustrates how the nation’s policymakers developed a unique balancing strategy to ascertain the country’s sovereignty and eliminate security risks under overwhelming geopolitical pressures that emanated from Russia and China. Chapter V discusses the episode when Nazarbayev was subjected to direct international pressure to surrender the inherited Soviet nuclear arsenal on the terms imposed by the USA, in response to which Nazarbayev devised a deliberately ambivalent and protracted strategy in regard to the republic’s nuclear status. Chapter VI reveals the adaptability of the republic’s policymaking to the changing international context as the regression of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace initiative demonstrates. The exposition of intricate policy planning and profound diplomatic endeavours reflected in archival documents reinforces the thesis’s premise about the non-deterministic nature of Kazakhstan’s foreign policy. v Table of contents Acknowledgements.................................................................................................................... III Abstract...................................................................................................................................... V Table of contents........................................................................................................................ VI List of illustrations..................................................................................................................... IX List of abbreviations................................................................................................................... X Chapter I: Introduction .............................................................................................................. 1 Empirical and conceptual context of the research.......................................................... 1 Research objectives and contribution............................................................................. 10 Research methods and design........................................................................................ 12 Research approach............................................................................................. 12 Research design and case selection................................................................... 15 Research instruments and data collection...................................................................... 16 Archival documents............................................................................................ 16 Triangulation...................................................................................................... 19 Interviews........................................................................................................... 20 Participant observation...................................................................................... 21 Challenges and limitations............................................................................................. 22 Note on reflexivity............................................................................................... 22 Fieldwork challenges.......................................................................................... 23 Research limitations........................................................................................... 26 Thesis outline................................................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • Selected Works of Chokan Valikhanov Selected Works of Chokan Valikhanov
    SELECTED WORKS OF CHOKAN VALIKHANOV CHOKAN OF WORKS SELECTED SELECTED WORKS OF CHOKAN VALIKHANOV Pioneering Ethnographer and Historian of the Great Steppe When Chokan Valikhanov died of tuberculosis in 1865, aged only 29, the Russian academician Nikolai Veselovsky described his short life as ‘a meteor flashing across the field of oriental studies’. Set against his remarkable output of official reports, articles and research into the history, culture and ethnology of Central Asia, and more important, his Kazakh people, it remains an entirely appropriate accolade. Born in 1835 into a wealthy and powerful Kazakh clan, he was one of the first ‘people of the steppe’ to receive a Russian education and military training. Soon after graduating from Siberian Cadet Corps at Omsk, he was taking part in reconnaissance missions deep into regions of Central Asia that had seldom been visited by outsiders. His famous mission to Kashgar in Chinese Turkestan, which began in June 1858 and lasted for more than a year, saw him in disguise as a Tashkent mer- chant, risking his life to gather vital information not just on current events, but also on the ethnic make-up, geography, flora and fauna of this unknown region. Journeys to Kuldzha, to Issyk-Kol and to other remote and unmapped places quickly established his reputation, even though he al- ways remained inorodets – an outsider to the Russian establishment. Nonetheless, he was elected to membership of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society and spent time in St Petersburg, where he was given a private audience by the Tsar. Wherever he went he made his mark, striking up strong and lasting friendships with the likes of the great Russian explorer and geographer Pyotr Petrovich Semyonov-Tian-Shansky and the writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
    [Show full text]
  • 2014 CEU Political Science Journal 9(1-2): 16-38 CEU Political Science Journal
    THE NOTION OF “KAZAKHNESS” BEHIND THE SYMBOLIC NATION-BUILDING OF KAZAKHSTAN Narek Mkrtchyan Yerevan State University Abstract The paper deals with the processes of overcoming Russian ‘colonial’ impediments to the creation of symbolic spaces for the emergence of a new national self- consciousness in Kazakhstan. The paper highlights the importance of Nazarbaev’s decision to transfer to and construct a new capital Astana in fostering the ideas of national identity and ethnic belonging. Therefore, an attempt has been made to observe the phenomena of urbanization and reformulation of state symbols in explaining both ethnic and civic mechanisms of influences on people’s consciousness. Additionally, the works of various Kazakh intellectuals and cultural figures have been taken into consideration to examine the notion of Kazakhness and its’ contribution to the development of the Kazakh national identity. Content analysis of architectural design of Astana and state symbols is essential to understand the vision of Kazakhstan’s imagined future. Keywords: Astana, post-Soviet, post-colonial, national identity, nation building 1. Introduction After the breakdown of the Soviet Empire all post-communist regimes emphasized the role of ethno nationalism in establishing new nation-building projects. The model of Kazakhstan’s nation building is quite unique in terms of harmonious interethnic coexistence of a multiethnic society. Since independence President Nazarbaev initiated serious programs in an effort to start active nation-building processes. As a matter of fact, Nazarbaev’s nation and state building policies are represented for the Kazakhs as a civilizational endeavor. Nazarbaev took Kazakhstan through large scale administrative, legislative, social, economic and political reforms.
    [Show full text]
  • Isaacs 2009 Between
    RADAR Oxford Brookes University – Research Archive and Digital Asset Repository (RADAR) Copyright © and Moral Rights for this thesis are retained by the author and/or other copyright owners. A copy may be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge. No quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. You must obtain permission for any other use of this thesis. Copies of this thesis may not be sold or offered to anyone in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright owner(s). When referring to this work, the full bibliographic details must be given as follows: Isaacs, R. (2009). Between informal and formal politics : neopatrimonialism and party development in post-Soviet Kazakhstan. PhD thesis. Oxford Brookes University. go/radar www.brookes.ac.uk/ Directorate of Learning Resources Between Informal and Formal Politics: Neopatrimonialism and Party Development in post-Soviet Kazakhstan Rico Isaacs Oxford Brookes University A Ph.D. thesis submitted to the School of Social Sciences and Law Oxford Brookes University, in partial fulfilment of the award of Doctor of Philosophy March 2009 98,218 Words Abstract This study is concerned with exploring the relationship between informal forms of political behaviour and relations and the development of formal institutions in post- Soviet Central Asian states as a way to explain the development of authoritarianism in the region. It moves the debate on from current scholarship which places primacy on either formal or informal politics in explaining modern political development in Central Asia, by examining the relationship between the two.
    [Show full text]
  • Zhanat Kundakbayeva the HISTORY of KAZAKHSTAN FROM
    MINISTRY OF EDUCATION AND SCIENCE OF THE REPUBLIC OF KAZAKHSTAN THE AL-FARABI KAZAKH NATIONAL UNIVERSITY Zhanat Kundakbayeva THE HISTORY OF KAZAKHSTAN FROM EARLIEST PERIOD TO PRESENT TIME VOLUME I FROM EARLIEST PERIOD TO 1991 Almaty "Кazakh University" 2016 ББК 63.2 (3) К 88 Recommended for publication by Academic Council of the al-Faraby Kazakh National University’s History, Ethnology and Archeology Faculty and the decision of the Editorial-Publishing Council R e v i e w e r s: doctor of historical sciences, professor G.Habizhanova, doctor of historical sciences, B. Zhanguttin, doctor of historical sciences, professor K. Alimgazinov Kundakbayeva Zh. K 88 The History of Kazakhstan from the Earliest Period to Present time. Volume I: from Earliest period to 1991. Textbook. – Almaty: "Кazakh University", 2016. - &&&& p. ISBN 978-601-247-347-6 In first volume of the History of Kazakhstan for the students of non-historical specialties has been provided extensive materials on the history of present-day territory of Kazakhstan from the earliest period to 1991. Here found their reflection both recent developments on Kazakhstan history studies, primary sources evidences, teaching materials, control questions that help students understand better the course. Many of the disputable issues of the times are given in the historiographical view. The textbook is designed for students, teachers, undergraduates, and all, who are interested in the history of the Kazakhstan. ББК 63.3(5Каз)я72 ISBN 978-601-247-347-6 © Kundakbayeva Zhanat, 2016 © al-Faraby KazNU, 2016 INTRODUCTION Данное учебное пособие is intended to be a generally understandable and clearly organized outline of historical processes taken place on the present day territory of Kazakhstan since pre-historic time.
    [Show full text]
  • Tonyukuk and Turkic State Ideology “Mangilik
    THE TONYUKUK AND AN ANCIENT TURK’S STATE IDEOLOGY OF “MANGILIK EL” PJAEE, 17 (6) (2020) THE TONYUKUK AND AN ANCIENT TURK’S STATE IDEOLOGY OF “MANGILIK EL” Nurtas B. SMAGULOV, PhD student of the of the Department of Kazakhstan History, L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University, Kazakhstan, [email protected] Aray K. ZHUNDIBAYEVA, PhD, Head of the Department of Kazakh literature, accociate professor of the Department of Kazakh literature, Shakarim state University of Semey (SSUS), (State University named after Shakarim of city Semey), Kazakhstan, [email protected] Satay M. SIZDIKOV, Doctor of historical science, professor of the Department of Turkology, L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University, Kazakhstan, [email protected] Arap S. YESPENBETOV, Doctor of philological science, professor of the Department of Kazakh literature, Shakarim state University of Semey (SSUS), (State University named after Shakarim of city Semey), Kazakhstan, [email protected] Ardak K. KAPYSHEV, Candidate of historical science, accociate professor of the Department of International Relations, History and Social Work, Abay Myrzkhmetov Kokshetau University, Kazakhstan, [email protected] Nurtas B. SMAGULOV, Aray K. ZHUNDIBAYEVA, Satay M. SIZDIKOV, Arap S. YESPENBETOV, Ardak K. KAPYSHEV: The Tonyukuk And An Ancient Turk’s State Ideology Of “Mangilik El” -- Palarch’s Journal Of Archaeology Of Egypt/Egyptology 17(6). ISSN 1567-214x ABSTRACT Purpose of the study. Studying and evaluating the activities of Tonykuk, who was the state adviser to the Second Turkic Kaganate, the main ideologist responsible for the ideological activities of the Kaganate from 682 to 745, is an urgent problem of historical science. In the years 646-725 he worked as an adviser on political and cultural issues of the three Kagan.
    [Show full text]
  • Regulation of Relations Between the State and Religious Confessions in the Prc and the Rk: an Attempt at Comparative Analysis
    Volume 21 Issue 2 2020 CENTRAL ASIA AND THE CAUCASUS English Edition REGULATION OF RELATIONS BETWEEN THE STATE AND RELIGIOUS CONFESSIONS IN THE PRC AND THE RK: AN ATTEMPT AT COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS DOI: https://doi.org/10.37178/ca-c.20.2.07 Gabit KONUSOV Ph.D. (Religious Studies), Political observer, Independent analyst (Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan) Yang LI Ph.D. Student, Kazakh Humanitarian Law Innovative University (Semey, Kazakhstan) Taisia MARMONTOVA Ph.D. (Hist.), Professor, Institute of Diplomacy, Academy of State Governance at the President of the RK (Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan) ABSTRACT his article sums up the results ob- Our analysis relies on the following tained by a group of scientists who characteristics of a comprehensive ap- T analyzed different models of the rela- proach: a wide range of sources—from legal tions between the state and religious con- acts and political declarations to the authors’ fessions using the Republic of Kazakhstan personal observations; the means and and the People’s Republic of China as ex- methods (analysis and synthesis) of a gen- amples to conceptualize this sphere of state eral scientific nature and discussion of indi- governance that initially seems to be of a vidual cases to refer to specific research practical scope. problems. KEYWORDS: state policies, state-confessional relations, religious associations, national security, global challenges and threats. 76 CENTRAL ASIA AND THE CAUCASUS English Edition Volume 21 Issue 2 2020 Introduction Religion is an important part of individual and collective identity; today the dialog between religions and the related problems have been pushed to the fore by the need of all states to preserve their security and stability.
    [Show full text]
  • ASTANA: a New Post-Soviet Text
    International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Vol. 3 No. 21 [Special Issue – December 2013] ASTANA: A New Post-Soviet Text Narek Mkrtchyan Yerevan State University, American University of Armenia PhD in World History Armenia, Yerevan Abstract The paper examines one of the key innovative projects of Kazakhstan’s post-Soviet nation building. As a case in point, the transfer and construction of new capital Astana by Nazarbayev regime will be taken into consideration. In this context, the establishment of national identity via urban environment is particularly essential and is best exemplified by the discussion of Astana’s semiotic analysis. The urban environment of Astana should be understood not as a manifestation of modern architecture but as a unique text created by sings and symbolic meanings in an attempt to furnish Kazakhstan's nation building processes. The article attempts to draw parallels between models of urban social utopia and of the Kazakhstan's visionary future. The establishment of Astana is more than a mere modern architectural designing: at the same time itinvolvesboth elements of required legitimization, counter colonial/hegemonic struggle, demographic policy, and of civic and ethnic nation building ideologies. Keyword:Astana, post-Soviet innovation, nation building, identity, signs, semiotics, social utopia Introduction The establishment of independence in former Soviet space brought multidimensional transformations in the spheres of culture, politics, social affairs etc. Similar to some countries in Kazakhstan the post-Soviet transformations have been accompanied by thoughtful innovative national building projects. The nation building process in Kazakhstan differs from other post-Soviet states because of its multiethnic and multi-religious society.
    [Show full text]
  • Download (2120Kb)
    A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of PhD at the University of Warwick Permanent WRAP URL: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/81134 Copyright and reuse: This thesis is made available online and is protected by original copyright. Please scroll down to view the document itself. Please refer to the repository record for this item for information to help you to cite it. Our policy information is available from the repository home page. For more information, please contact the WRAP Team at: [email protected] warwick.ac.uk/lib-publications University of Warwick Politics and International Studies Department Living on the Edge: Relocating Kazakhstan on the Margins of Power Davinia Hoggarth A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctoral of Philosophy in Politics and International Studies Submitted September 2015 II I Contents Acknowledgements V Declarations VII Abstract VIII Abbreviations IX Introduction 1 The Birth of ‘Central Asia’ 5 Classical Geopolitics and the Great Game 10 Structure and Scope of the Thesis 20 Chapter 1 – Methodology 28 Theory versus Practise 34 Chapter 2 – Literature Review 41 Geopolitics and Marginality 42 Strategic Culture 58 Central Asia 66 Chapter 3 – Eurasia: Marginal States and Great Powers 81 Entanglement of Security, Grand Strategy and Energy 85 Competing Eurasianisms 94 Energy as Foreign Policy and Strategy in Kazakhstan 108 Chapter 4 – Kazakhstan: Oil and Governance 114 Introduction to Kazakh Energy industry 117 Explaining KMGs Strategy and Performance 123 Relationship between Government
    [Show full text]
  • Languages and the Ethnic Politics in Central Asia
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AND AREA STUDIES 101 Volume 11, Number 1, 2004, pp.101-116 Languages and Ethnic Politics in Central Asia: The Case of Kazakhstan* Chaimun Lee This paper addresses the significance of conciliatory language policies in defusing ethnic tension, especially between indigenous Kazakhs and ethnic Russians in Kazakhstan. The following language policies were identified as crucial to tolerant interethnic relations: the strategy to create divergent messages, the compromise of language titles, the soft policy on language requirements for employment and higher education, mild policy on ethnic-language ties, and the unified language policy. In the background of conciliatory language policies are the geographical aspect, the unavoidable real need for the use of Russian language, and the important role of the Russophones in running the country. Further comparative research in the former Soviet republics is suggested to confirm the findings of the current study regarding the effectiveness of language policies in making safe interethnic relations in Kazakhstan. Keywords: ethnopolitics, Kazakh, indigenization, language policy 1. INTRODUCTION Many people thought that the breakdown of the Soviet Union would lead to enormous ethnic violence in the former Soviet republics, especially in Central Asia. In this category of researchers were those who put more emphasis on ethnic and religious disputes. Their argument was not without foundation. According to the statistics, more than 1 million people were dislocated within the former Soviet Union due to ethnic tensions and conflicts (Helton 1996: 34). The typical sites of ethnic strife were Tajikistan and Uzbekistan in Central Asia. Ethnic groups in these countries who did not have the knowledge of indigenous language were fired from their jobs or were discriminated against in education.
    [Show full text]
  • CAUSES of ETHNIC CLASHES in KAZAKHSTAN.Pdf
    THESIS APPROVAL FORM NAZARBAYEV UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES CAUSES OF ETHNIC CLASHES IN KAZAKHSTAN ПРИЧИНЫ ЭТНИЧЕСКИХ КОНФЛИКТОВ В КАЗАХСТАНЕ ҚАЗАҚСТАНДАҒ Ы ЭТНИКАЛЫҚ ҚАҚТЫҒ ЫСТАРДЫҢ СЕБЕПТЕРІ BY Vlad Lim NU Student Number: 201950507 APPROVED BY Dr. Hélène Thibault ON 27 May, 2021 Signature of Principal Thesis Adviser In Agreement with Thesis Advisory Committee Second Adviser: Dr. Karol Czuba External Reader: Dr. Barbara Junisbai CAUSES OF ETHNIC CLASHES IN KAZAKHSTAN ПРИЧИНЫ ЭТНИЧЕСКИХ КОНФЛИКТОВ В КАЗАХСТАНЕ ҚАЗАҚСТАНДАҒЫ ЭТНИКАЛЫҚ ҚАҚТЫҒЫСТАРДЫҢ СЕБЕПТЕРІ by Vlad Lim A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Political Science and International Relations at NAZARBAYEV UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF SCIENCE AND HUMANITIES 2021 © 2021 Vlad Lim All Rights Reserved CAUSES OF ETHNIC CLASHES IN KAZAKHSTAN ПРИЧИНЫ ЭТНИЧЕСКИХ КОНФЛИКТОВ В КАЗАХСТАНЕ ҚАЗАҚСТАНДАҒЫ ЭТНИКАЛЫҚ ҚАҚТЫҒЫСТАРДЫҢ СЕБЕПТЕРІ by Vlad Lim Principal adviser: Dr. Hélène Thibault Second reader: Dr. Karol Czuba External reviewer: Dr. Barbara Junisbai iii Abstract In this research, I analyze the causes of violent confrontations that have taken place in Kazakhstan since independence. In particular, I close an important gap in the literature: most works have focused on certain aspects of ethnic problems in the country, such as language, migration, and Kazakhization, while the causes of violent clashes themselves have been understudied. Thus, my research demonstrates the roots of grievances that lead to mobilization of the titular ethnic group along ethnic lines. I studied the conducive role of Kazakhization on the perception of ethnic superiority among Kazakhs, demonstrating how the government promotes Kazakhness among population. Kazakhization has played an important role contributing to the level of grievances among ethnic Kazakhs.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Eurasian' Political Myth in Kazakhstan by Nazerke Sadykova Submitted To
    The instrumentalization of ‘Eurasian’ political myth in Kazakhstan By Nazerke Sadykova Submitted to Central European University Department of Nationalism Studies In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts Supervisor: Szabolcs Pogonyi CEU eTD Collection Budapest, Hungary 2017 Table of Contents Abstract 2 Introduction 3 Chapter 1. Theory and Methodology 7 1.1 Political myths 8 1.2. Methodology 11 Chapter 2. Literature Review 13 2.1 Political myths and the European Union 13 2.2 Eurasian discourses in Russia 16 Chapter 3. The origins of Eurasianism 19 Chapter 4. Identity politics in post-Soviet Kazakhstan 22 Chapter 5. Development of the Eurasian political myth in Kazakhstan 26 5.1 Initial framing of the Eurasian narrative - Escape from peripherality 27 5.2 Diffusion of the Eurasian political myth - “Nazarbayev - the Eurasian leader” 31 5.3 Institutionalization of the Eurasian myth - “Astana - a new Eurasian capital” 37 5.4 Kazakhstan in the Eurasian Economic Union 48 Conclusion 54 Bibliography 55 CEU eTD Collection 2 Abstract Utilizing theoretical literature on political myth and methods of political discourse analysis the thesis explores the development of Eurasian political myth produced through independent elite discourses in Kazakhstan since 1991. President Nursultan Nazarbayev emerged as an active promoter of post-Soviet integration processes and introduced his own interpretation, vision, strategy, and collection of policies that developed and constituted the Eurasian political myth. Discourses of the myth framed regional and domestic policies pursued by the Kazakhstani state and served as a foundation of the Eurasian Economic Union established in 2015. The myth created codes of collective self-identification and stories that conferred significance upon Kazakhstan’s new post-Soviet political situation.
    [Show full text]
  • Locating Russia in the Emerging Geopolitics of Central Asia: Mapping India’S Options
    LOCATING RUSSIA IN THE EMERGING GEOPOLITICS OF CENTRAL ASIA: MAPPING INDIA’S OPTIONS Thesis submitted to the Central University of Punjab For the award of Doctor of Philosophy In South and Central Asian Studies BY Mudasir Mubarik Supervisor Dr. Bawa Singh Centre for South and Central Asian Studies School of Global Relations Central University of Punjab, Bathinda August, 2019 i CERTIFICATE I declare that the thesis entitled, “Locating Russia in the Emerging Geopolitics of Central Asia: Mapping India’s Options” has been prepared by me under the guidance of Dr. Bawa Singh, Assistant Professor, Central for South and Central Asian Studies, School of Global Relations, Central University of Punjab. No part of this thesis has formed the basis for the award of any degree or fellowship previously. Name and signature of candidate Centre for South and Central Asia, School of Global Relations, Central University of Punjab, Bathinda ‐ 151001. Date: ii CERTIFICATE I certify that Mudasir Mubarik has prepared his thesis entitled, “Locating Russia in the Emerging Geopolitics of Central Asia: Mapping India’s Options”, for the award of Ph.D. degree of the Central University of Punjab, under my guidance. He has carried out this work at the Centre for South and Central Asian Studies, School of Global Relations, Central University of Punjab. Dr. Bawa Singh Centre for South and Central Asian Studies School of Global Relations Central University of Punjab, Bathinda‐151001. Date: iii ABSTRACT Locating Russia in the Emerging Geopolitics of Central Asia: Mapping India’s Options Name of student: Mudasir Mubarik Registration number: CUP/MPhil-Ph.D/SGR/SCA/2011-12/05 Degree for which submitted: Doctor of Philosophy Name of Supervisor: Dr.
    [Show full text]