2019
DOI: 10.1111/muwo.12315
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Nation‐Building in Central Asia: Institutions, Politics, and Culture

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 16 publications
(30 reference statements)
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“…The spiritual and material situation of the people severely deteriorated. At this time, Kazakh society significantly felt the social support from religion (Kamrava 2020). According to E. Burova (2014), religion helped susceptible groups to solve those social problems that society and the state cannot solve, to help in moral support, to receive material assistance, and to overcome from extreme hopelessness.…”
Section: Socio-cultural Conditions For Revival Of Islam In Kazakhstanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The spiritual and material situation of the people severely deteriorated. At this time, Kazakh society significantly felt the social support from religion (Kamrava 2020). According to E. Burova (2014), religion helped susceptible groups to solve those social problems that society and the state cannot solve, to help in moral support, to receive material assistance, and to overcome from extreme hopelessness.…”
Section: Socio-cultural Conditions For Revival Of Islam In Kazakhstanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The personalization of power in Central Asia has led to a situation, where state-building depends on personal decisions and performances of handful of individuals, rather than on well-established and functioning institutions. Given the authoritarian context within which Central Asian nation building has been unfolding, the distinction between institutional and political dynamics is often blurred, i.e., institutions are frequently politicized, and political objectives are institutionalized (Kamrava, 2019). Thus, one of the most formidable challenges facing Kyrgyzstan is "transforming the accidental arrangements, prudential norms, and contingent solutions .…”
Section: Beyond the Revolutions: The Challenges Of Post-revolution State-buildingmentioning
confidence: 99%