Formation of sovereign Power systems in the “Young” Central Asian Republics in the Period 1991–2000
https://doi.org/10.26794/2226-7867-2021-11-3-89-92
Abstract
In 1991, with the collapse of the USSR, ffteen independent republics were formed At the same time, the processes that took place in the late Union influenced the further formation of sovereign power systems in the “young” states Among them are ideological and apparatus factors As a result, having different attitudes towards the collapse of the Union and the parade of sovereignties, all ffteen republics faced the task of fnding their own identity, both national and state-apparatus, and the need to form a personnel policy and build “power vertical” The Central Asian republics were no exception, where, in addition to the above tasks, the question of the influence of the tribalist factor was acute.
About the Author
D. D. OsininaRussian Federation
Daria D. Osinina — 2nd-year Post-graduate student of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Mass Communications
Moscow
References
1. Osinina D.D. Changing the guard: the personnel reserve of Central Asian elite communities. Moscow: INFRA-M; 2020. (In Russ.).
2. Volgin E.I. Socio-political associations of modern Russia Russia at the turn of the century. Part I: the second half of the 1980s — 1999. URL: http://www.hist.msu.ru/Departments/SMPP/Staff/Volgin.pdf. (In Russ.).
3. Khrustalev M.A. Etnopoliticheskaya situatsiya v Tsentralnoy Asii [The ethnopolitical situation in Central Asia]. Moscow: Navona; 2005. (In Russ.).
Review
For citations:
Osinina D.D. Formation of sovereign Power systems in the “Young” Central Asian Republics in the Period 1991–2000. Humanities and Social Sciences. Bulletin of the Financial University. 2021;11(3):89-92. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.26794/2226-7867-2021-11-3-89-92