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Köp båda 2 för 2587 krEurasias De Facto States is a welcome addition to the broader literature on sovereign anomalies. It covers emerging de facto states like Donetsk and Luhansk and is historically innovative in examining early twentieth century cases. The book pursues a comprehensive life cycle analysis of the birth, life and death of de facto states. Strong conceptual frameworks drive the case study analysis. It is outstanding on not treating the Eurasian de facto states as Russian puppets but rather seeing them as polities with their own internal logics whose fates are ultimately decided by an evolving mix of internal and external factors. Scott Pegg, Professor, Department of Political Science, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis and author of International Society and the De Facto State.
Tom Hoch and Vincenc Kopeek are Assistant Professors in the Department of Human Geography and Regional Development at Ostrava University, Czechia.
Introduction, Section 1 De facto statehood: understanding the concept, 1.1 Terminology, 1.2 De facto statehood: overview of the research, 1.3 De facto states and other unrecognized entities in Eurasia, Section 2 Russian territorial expansion and de facto states in the first half of 20th century, 2.1 Introduction to Russian and Soviet territorial expansion, 2.2 Bukharan Peoples Soviet Republic: from protectorate to SSR, 2.3 Tuva and Mongolia: between annexation and independence, Section 3 The emergence of de facto states, 3.1 Factors of de facto states formation in the post-Soviet area, 3.2 Formation of de facto states in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, 3.3 Nagorno-Karabakh and Javakheti: two different trajectories of Armenian separatist movements, 3.4 Unfinished story of the Donetsk and Luhansk Peoples Republics: towards a de facto state? Section 4 How de facto states are sustained and instrumentalized, 4.1 Factors of de facto states sustainability, 4.2 Unrecognized states as a means of Russias coercive diplomacy? An empirical analysis, 4.3 The patronclient relationship between Russia and Transnistria, 4.4 The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and the Republic of Armenia: who instrumentalizes whom? 4.5 Inside a de facto state: forming and sustaining the Abkhazian and Nagorno-Karabakh Republic polities, Section 5 Why de facto states fail, 5.1 Possible ends of de facto states, 5.2 Explaining de facto states failure, 5.3 Why de facto states fail. Lessons from the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, 5.4 The emergence and failure of the Gagauz Republic (19891995), Conclusion