Akchurin, Marat:Red Odyssey: A journey through the Soviet Republics
- Paperback 2011, ISBN: 9780436200267
Hardcover
KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its âextended ne… More...
KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its âextended neighbourâ or an âimmediate and strategic neighbourhoodâ. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22., KW Publishers, 2011, 6, KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its extended neighbour or an immediate and strategic neighbourhood. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22. NA, KW Publishers, 2011, 6, KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its âextended neighbourâ or an âimmediate and strategic neighbourhoodâ. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22., KW Publishers, 2011, 6, KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its extended neighbour or an immediate and strategic neighbourhood. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22. NA, KW Publishers, 2011, 6, KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its Û÷extended neighbourÛª or an Û÷immediate and strategic neighbourhoodÛª. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22., KW Publishers, 2011, 6, KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its âextended neighbourâ or an âimmediate and strategic neighbourhoodâ. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22., KW Publishers, 2011, 6, KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its Û÷extended neighbourÛª or an Û÷immediate and strategic neighbourhoodÛª. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22., KW Publishers, 2011, 6, KW Publishers, 2011. Softcover. New. India has been so historically linked with Central Asia that the region is known in Indian diplomatic parlance as its Û÷extended neighbourÛª or an Û÷immediate and strategic neighbourhoodÛª. In this paradigm Uzbekistan, sharing a common boundary with other Central Asian Republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan, occupies a crucial place. British colonialism interrupted this historic link between India and Central Asia. During the Soviet regime, too, the interaction between the sub-continent and, what we now call the CIS states, was tempered through Moscow. But even within these constraints India and Uzbekistan retained a special relationship. The post-Cold War period, however, opened up new possibilities of direct contacts between India and Uzbekistan, especially when the latter reoriented itself to Asia and not Russia. It is in this context that the current Indo-Uzbek relations need to be seen. This paper tries to address that very need. Contents: Contents 1. The Legacy 2. The Present Scenario 3. The Way Forward 4. Conclusion Printed Pages: 22., KW Publishers, 2011, 6, Washington, D. C: National Geographis Society, 1997. 1st ed.. Pictorial Cover. Fine. Fine in Not Issued jacket Monthly Issue One of the best love magazines. Highly collectible. Each Magazine in our collection is perfect for you if you missed an issue. Dont see it here, just email. This issue contains Aging, Rafting in Uzbekistan, Flies that fight, Nepal's forgotten corner, North Woods Journal and many more spanning our globe and beyond., National Geographis Society, 1997, 5, Washington, D.C: National Geographic Society, 1997. Softcover. Excellent. Aging, Rafting in Uzbekistan, Quebec's Quandary, Flies that Fight, Hutsul Village, Nepal's Forgotten Corner, Northwoods Journal, National Geographic Society, 1997, 0, London: Secker & Warburg , 1992. Hardcover. Fair/very good. Travelling at first by car and, when that disintegrates, by any means at hand, the author - an adventurous, irreverant Muscovite - reveals a Soviet Union few Western travellers have ever seen; a country on the edge of civil war, where ethnic tensions are leading increasingly to violence and gangs of young thugs terrorise outsiders like himself. As he travels - through Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenia and Azerbaijan - he visits new towns and old haunts, friends and family, and poets, artists and scholars who have become politicians in the newly politicised nation. The result is a book rich in history, full of marvellous anecdotes, a compelling portrait of an empire on the edge of disintegration. Size, 24 x 155cm, 431 pages, 1 map. Ex-library, front endpaper removed, some library markings. Black cloth boards in very good pictorial dust jacket. Internally, Fair-to-Good: pages yellowing slightly, but overall are clean and unmarked in sound bindings., Secker & Warburg, 1992, 2.5<