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Uzbekistan

SUBJECT OF BOOKS


Shahram Akbarzadeh. Uzbekistan and the United States: Authoritarianism, Islamism and Washington's Security Agenda. Zed Books. 2005. 166pp.

Annette Bohr. Uzbekistan: Politics and Foreign Policy. Royal Institute of Internal Affairs. 1998. 70pp.

James Critchlow. Nationalism in Uzbekistan: A Soviet Republic's Road to Sovereignty. Westview Press. 1991. 256pp.

Mary Masayo Doi. Gesture, Gender, Nation: Dance and Social Change in Uzbekistan. Greenwood Publishing Group. 2002. 151pp.

Johannes Kalter; Margareta Pavaloi (editors). Uzbekistan: Heirs to the Silk Road. Thames and Hudson. 1997. 360pp.

Marianne Kamp. The New Woman in Uzbekistan: Islam, Modernity, and Unveiling Under Communism. University of Washington Press. 2006. 332pp.

Islam Karimov. Uzbekistan on the Threshold of the Twenty-first Century: Challenges to Stability and Progress. Macmillan. 1998. 196pp.

Jacob M. Landau; Barbara Kellner-Heinkele. Politics of Language in the Ex-Soviet Muslim States: Azerbayjan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan. University of Michigan Press. 2001. 260pp.

David MacFadyen. Russian Culture in Uzbekistan: One Language in the Middle of Nowhere. Routledge. 2006. 162pp.

Neil Melvin. Uzbekistan: Transition to Authoritarianism on the Silk Road. Routledge. 2000. 129pp.

Acacia Shields. Creating Enemies of the State: Religious Persecution in Uzbekistan. Human Rights Watch. 2004. 319pp.

Resul Yalcin. The Rebirth of Uzbekistan: Politics, Economy and Society in the Post-Soviet Era. Garnet & Ithaca Press. 2002. 349pp.




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