Political-Social Movements: Islamist Movements and Discourses: Caucasus and Central Asia

1999 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shahram Akbarzadeh

This paper traces political events and modes of generating legitimacy in Turkmenistan since the Soviet collapse. The emphasis here is on state policies and social movements that relate to “nation building” for their contribution to political legitimacy. The extent of nation-building success is not an immediate subject of inquiry, for this paper is not about public perception and bottom-up response to state policies, but the reverse. It is certain that state-sponsored proclamations and nationalist ideas espoused by the intelligentsia do not always find resonance among the national population at large. However, attention given to social movements in this paper may compensate for this shortcoming in a small way. It must be stated that social movements in Turkmenistan, and Central Asia, as a whole, have been top heavy. They were principally initiated and steered by the urbanized intelligentsia. The extent of mass involvement in such movements is suspect and hard to gauge.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Mohiaddin Mesbahi

The 1979 Iranian Revolution and the re-emergence of Islam as a major political factor ushered in an international narrative linking Islam with security. This initial securitisation of Islam was qualitatively enhanced by the 9/11 crisis and the emergence of a US-inspired and led global masternarrative on Islamic threat. Eurasian Islam had its own rich, more nuanced and complex normative heritage, both in its “Orthodox” imperial Russian and Marxist Soviet past, from which to construct its own native securitisation narrative of Islam; it was nevertheless heavily affected by the post-9/11 global masternarrative. This article analyses the impact of this masternarrative on the securitisation of Islam in Eurasia, and its symbiosis and encounter with Eurasian Islam in the post-Soviet, and especially post-9/11, eras. It further analyses Russia’s attempt at both bandwagoning and differentiation, the utilisation of the masternarrative in Central Asia and its implications for authoritarianism, and the disposition of major actors such as the US, China, Iran and Turkey towards the securitisation of Islam. Post-Arab Spring dynamics have added new levels of complexity to the securitisation of Islam, specifically for Russia and its relations with the North Caucasus in particular, and with the wider Muslim and Western worlds more generally. Encounters and synergies between the global and Eurasian narratives, as elsewhere, have become a major source of policy connectivity between the states, societies, and social movements of the region and global Islamic politics.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (4 (28)) ◽  
pp. 121-130
Author(s):  
Sergey B. Margulis

This article explores the problem of Islamic fundamentalism in Tajikistan. The relevance of the topic is due to the fact that in this Republic there is the greatest activity of Islamist movements among all CIS countries. The potential destabilization of the situation in Tajikistan threatens the entire sub-region of Central Asia, and may also lead to the transit of instability to the Russian North Caucasus. In this paper, the author examines the influence of religious, socio-economic and other factors on the radicalization of Islam in this post-Soviet Republic, as well as the activities of fundamentalist groups with a focus on the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (IRPT).


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