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March and after: what has changed? What has stayed the same?
This article recalls the major events that have taken place since 24 March 2005. It examines Bakiev's new government formed in December 2007, analyses the changes in criminal world dynamics, explains problems in the hydro-energy sector, and concludes with a section on civil society groups. The...
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Published in: | Central Asian survey 2008-09, Vol.27 (3-4), p.229-240 |
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container_title | Central Asian survey |
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creator | Marat, Erica |
description | This article recalls the major events that have taken place since 24 March 2005. It examines Bakiev's new government formed in December 2007, analyses the changes in criminal world dynamics, explains problems in the hydro-energy sector, and concludes with a section on civil society groups. The article demonstrates how corruption, crime and politics are interlinked in the country and how, on the other hand, local civil society groups have proved to be considerably more stable compared to political parties. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1080/02634930802536506 |
format | article |
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ispartof | Central Asian survey, 2008-09, Vol.27 (3-4), p.229-240 |
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language | eng |
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source | International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Taylor and Francis Social Sciences and Humanities Collection |
subjects | Bakiev Civil Society Corruption Crime criminal groups Groups Historical analysis hydro-energy Kyrgyzstan NGOs Non-governmental organizations Nongovernmental Organizations Offenders Political change Political Parties Politics Post-communist societies Recall Regression analysis Revolution Revolutions Social change State-society relations |
title | March and after: what has changed? What has stayed the same? |
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