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Dissent in Soviet Central Asia*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Michael Rywkin*
Affiliation:
Russian Area Studies, City College N. Y.

Abstract

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Type
Symposium (A Decade of Dissent in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe: Meaning of the 1970s)
Copyright
Copyright © 1981 by the Association for the Study of the Nationalities (USSR and East Europe) Inc. 

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References

Notes

* Summary of the paper presented at Second World Congress on Soviet and East European Studies, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, German Federal Republic, September 30 — October 4, 1980.Google Scholar

** Information based on interviews conducted with former residents of Soviet Central Asia recently arrived in New York.Google Scholar

1. Kzyl Uzbekiston, 27 April, 1978.Google Scholar

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3. Alexandre Bennigsen, “Several Nations or One People,” Survey (London) No. 108 (Summer 1979), p. 59.Google Scholar

4. Hélène Carrère d'Encausse, L ‘Empire éclaté (Paris: Flammarion, 1978) Ch. viii, pp. 255ff.Google Scholar

5. Bennigsen, op. cit., p. 51ff.Google Scholar

6. Michael Rywkin, “Central Asia and Soviet Manpower,” Problems of Communism (January/February 1979), p. 13.Google Scholar

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9. Redzhep Karaev (interview), “Slovo zovushchee,” Nauka i religiia, No. 4, 1979, p. 10.Google Scholar

10. Michael Rywkin, “Religion, Modern Nationalism, and Political Power in Soviet Central Asia” Canadian Slavonic Papers, vol. xvii, Nos. 2 &3, 1975, p. 271.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

11. B.Y. Kamenetskii, “The Pakhtakor Events,” RFE-RL Soviet Area Audience and Opinion Research, October 26, 1979.Google Scholar

12. A. Baran'ko, “Zigzag odnogo sledstviia,” Sovetskaia Kirgiziia, December 27, 1979.Google Scholar