Article contents
Soviet Centrifugalism: Republics as Independent Actors*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
Empire depends not only upon the strength of the center but upon compliant behavior in the periphery, and the nature of interactions between center and periphery. Each of these three variables is changing rapidly in the former Soviet empire.
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- Information
- Nationalities Papers , Volume 21 , Issue 2: Special Issue - The Ex-Soviet Nationalities Without Gorbachev , Fall 1993 , pp. 9 - 24
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- Copyright © 1993 by the Association for the Study of the Nationalities of the USSR and Eastern Europe, Inc.
References
Notes
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5. Meeting with Lennart Meri on May 24, 1991, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
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10. Representatives of the foreign ministries of the Russian and the three Baltic republics met in Vilnius in February 1991 and in Riga in March. Their meetings were an implementation of the Declaration on Cooperation Between The Baltic Countries And The RSFSR signed in Tallin in January 13, 1991. In Riga, the delegations exchanged information on the population polls and the referendum organized by the USSR, Ekho Litvy, March 22, 1991, p. 1 in FBIS-SOV, April 10, 1991, p. 41.Google Scholar
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30. Europe is moving toward confederation, but for the present is barely an economic union, much less a political one. Its members are far apart on many issues. In a crisis like the Gulf War, each went its own way.Google Scholar
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34. The chance that Tatars in their own Autonomous Republic and Jews in the RFSR would marry their own kind declined drastically in the 1980s. See Gosudarstvennyi Komitet SSSR po Statistiki, Naselenie SSSR 1988: Statisticheskii ezhegodnik (Moscow: Finansy i statistiki, 1989), analyzed in Walter C. Clemens, Jr., Baltic Independence and the Russian Empire (New York: St. Martin's, 1991), pp. 222–23.Google Scholar
35. South Ossetia's drive to secede from Georgia may be stirred and armed by the Center. Both the South Ossetians and Georgians have a wide range of arms.Google Scholar
36. Clemens, , “The Rights of ‘Nations.’”Google Scholar
37. For more details, see Clemens, Baltic Independence, pp. 41–43 and 285-86. For the broader picture, see Stephan Kux, “Neutrality after Alliance? The Cases of the East Central European and Soviet States,” in Risto Pentillä, ed., The Future of Neutrality (London: Macmillan, forthcoming).Google Scholar
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