Type | Journal Article - Anthropology of East Europe Review |
Title | Canaries in a Coal Mine?: Women and Nation-Building in the Kyrgyz Republic |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 14 |
Issue | 2 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1996 |
Page numbers | 31-52 |
URL | http://scholarworks.dlib.indiana.edu/journals/index.php/aeer/article/download/712/805 |
Abstract | Another socio-economic experiment is underway in the post-Soviet state of the Kyrgyz Republic.3 In this remote mountainous region bordering western China, four and a half million people are undergoing yet one more social, economic and political upheaval, the second within this century. After seventy years of Marxist collectivization which was facilitated to a great extent through their tribal kinship ties, the formerly nomadic Kyrgyz are now attempting to integrate the unfamiliar concepts of democracy, market economy and civil society. Nicknamed the "love child" of the international aid organizations, the Kyrgyz Republic is noted for its cooperation and high level of interest in being a part of the global economy. Unlike its oil-rich neighbors, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, the Kyrgyz Republic lacks such trading power, and as a Kyrgyz governmental official explained, "We may have the poetry of our mountains and our nomadic hospitality, but we are oil poor and have little choice but to cooperate with international interests." |
» | Kyrgyz Republic - All-Union Population Census 1989 |