Beyond State Crisis?: Post-Colonial Africa and Post-Soviet Eurasia in Comparative PerspectiveMark Beissinger, M. Crawford Young Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 8 ¡.¾. 2002 - 514 ˹éÒ This book compares sub-Saharan Africa and the former Soviet Union, two regions beset by the breakdown of states suffering from extreme official corruption, organized crime extending into warlordism, and the disintegration of economic institutions and public institutions for human services. The contributors not only study state breakdown but also compare the consequences of post-communism with those of post-colonialism. |
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Comparing State Crises across Two Continents | 3 |
PreIndependence State Legacies | 19 |
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Abkhazia Africa and Eurasia Ajaria authoritarian authority autonomous Azerbaijan Boris Yeltsin boundaries Burundi central challenge Chapter Chechen Chechnya civil society collapse colonial Communist conflict Congo-Kinshasa constitution context created criminal groups crises crisis cultural democracy democratic economic reform elections elites emerged enforcement Eurasia external factors forces formal former Soviet Union Georgia Ghana global human rights identity independence institutions leaders legacy legitimacy liberal Liberia Lynne Rienner mafiya major military Mkhedrioni Moldova Moscow neopatrimonial networks Nigeria nomic norms Obote officials organizations party percent population post-Soviet post-Soviet Eurasia postcolonial postcommunist president private armies protection regime regions republics role rule rulers Russian Federation Rwanda shadow Sierra Leone social Somalia South Ossetia sovereignty Soviet Union stability state-building statehood structures Tajikistan territorial tion tional titular nationalities transition Uganda violence warlords wars weak Western women World Yeltsin