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Publikační činnost
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Record type:
kapitola v odborné knize (C)
Home Department:
Katedra sociální geografie a regionálního rozvoje (31800)
Title:
Introduction
Citace
Jelen, L., Kopeček, V. a Lepič, M. Introduction.
In:
Ethnicity and Ethnic Minorities in Post-Soviet Eurasia.
New York: Routledge, 2026. s. 1-10. ISBN 9781003652885.
Subtitle
Publication year:
2026
Obor:
Form of publication:
Tištená verze
ISBN code:
9781003652885
Book title in original language:
Ethnicity and Ethnic Minorities in Post-Soviet Eurasia
Title of the edition and volume number:
neuvedeno
Place of publishing:
New York
Publisher name:
Routledge
Issue reference (issue number):
:
Published:
v zahraničí
Author of the source document:
Number of pages:
10
Book page count:
240
Page from:
1
Page to:
10
Book print run:
EID:
Key words in English:
ethnicity; ethnic minorities; post-Soviet Eurasia; nacionalization
Annotation in original language:
This book focuses on the study of ethnic minorities in post- Soviet Eurasia, their self-perceptions, and their relations with ethnic majorities and dominant state- and nation-building. Contributors to the book examine strategies and networks which minorities create for preserving a group’s distinctiveness while at the same time maintaining coexistence with the majority. The chapters also study the effects of different contextual settings of these strategies and networks. Offering a unique systematic comparison of selected cases using ethnicity as the main concept, the book argues it was the Soviet notion of ethnicity which stood in the centre of the administrative structure of the Soviet Union and that it consequently had a profound impact on how individual ethnic majority and minority groups in the former USSR understood themselves and imagined each other, how political institutions in individual Soviet republics and ethnic autonomies were formed, and how this institutional setting defined the distribution of political power between ethnic majorities and minorities. It also argues that this complex system of relations between ethnic minorities and majorities has significantly changed during the past 30 years and resulted in the formation of a post-Soviet notion of ethnicity. This book will be of interest to researchers studying Post- Soviet Politics, Political Geography, International Relations, Political Science, History, and Area studies.
Annotation in english language:
This book focuses on the study of ethnic minorities in post- Soviet Eurasia, their self-perceptions, and their relations with ethnic majorities and dominant state- and nation-building. Contributors to the book examine strategies and networks which minorities create for preserving a group’s distinctiveness while at the same time maintaining coexistence with the majority. The chapters also study the effects of different contextual settings of these strategies and networks. Offering a unique systematic comparison of selected cases using ethnicity as the main concept, the book argues it was the Soviet notion of ethnicity which stood in the centre of the administrative structure of the Soviet Union and that it consequently had a profound impact on how individual ethnic majority and minority groups in the former USSR understood themselves and imagined each other, how political institutions in individual Soviet republics and ethnic autonomies were formed, and how this institutional setting defined the distribution of political power between ethnic majorities and minorities. It also argues that this complex system of relations between ethnic minorities and majorities has significantly changed during the past 30 years and resulted in the formation of a post-Soviet notion of ethnicity. This book will be of interest to researchers studying Post- Soviet Politics, Political Geography, International Relations, Political Science, History, and Area studies.
References
Reference
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