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Palgrave Macmillan
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Neoliberalism and Post-Soviet Transition

Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan

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  • © 2018

Overview

  • Provides a structured comparative study of neoliberal transformation in post-Soviet Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan

  • Contains insights from political science, political economy, the Marxist critical school, cultural studies, and semiology

  • Contributes to research practices in political science with its cross-disciplinary approach

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Table of contents (7 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This collection emphasizes a cross-disciplinary approach to the problem of scale, with essays ranging in subject matter from literature to film, architecture, the plastic arts, philosophy, and scientific and political writing. Its contributors consider a variety of issues provoked by the sudden and pressing shifts in scale brought on by globalization and the era of the Anthropocene, including: the difficulties of defining the concept of scale; the challenges that shifts in scale pose to knowledge formation; the role of scale in mediating individual subjectivity and agency; the barriers to understanding objects existing in scalar realms different from our own; the role of scale in mediating the relationship between humans and the environment; and the nature of power, authority, and democracy at different social scales.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Department of Political Science, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, USA

    Wumaier Yilamu

About the author

​Wumaier Yilamu holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA. 

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