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National Identity and Political Legitimacy in Turkmenistan*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Extract

This paper traces political events and modes of generating legitimacy in Turkmenistan since the Soviet collapse. The emphasis here is on state policies and social movements that relate to “nation building” for their contribution to political legitimacy. The extent of nation-building success is not an immediate subject of inquiry, for this paper is not about public perception and bottom-up response to state policies, but the reverse. It is certain that state-sponsored proclamations and nationalist ideas espoused by the intelligentsia do not always find resonance among the national population at large. However, attention given to social movements in this paper may compensate for this shortcoming in a small way. It must be stated that social movements in Turkmenistan, and Central Asia, as a whole, have been top heavy. They were principally initiated and steered by the urbanized intelligentsia. The extent of mass involvement in such movements is suspect and hard to gauge.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1999 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

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References

Notes

1. For example Ak-Mukhammed Velsapar, a writer and a leading member of Agzybirlik, wrote a damning article on the high infant mortality rate in Turkmenistan and demanded immediate measures to improve general health conditions in the republic, “Tarn, gde ne vyrastet posokh …” [The place where nothing grows], Moskovskie Novosti , 8 April 1990.Google Scholar

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