The Neighborhood Effect: The Imperial Roots of Regional Fracture in Eurasia

Available

Product Details

Price
$74.75
Publisher
Stanford University Press
Publish Date
Pages
312
Dimensions
5.9 X 9.1 X 1.0 inches | 1.3 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781503632059

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About the Author

Anna Ohanyan is Richard B. Finnegan Distinguished Professor of Political Science and International Relations at Stonehill College. She is the author of Networked Regionalism as Conflict Management (Stanford, 2015).

Reviews

"Anybody interested in the never-ending ethnic conflicts around the world has much to learn from this book. The Neighborhood Effect makes the powerful case that regional fragmentation and adaptation have been primary to the empires and multi-ethnic states ruling over them, and any solution to these conflicts will require a better understanding of the regional context."--Daron Acemoglu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"A must-read, especially for social scientists and regional specialists. This most impressive, insightful analysis traces the Habsburg, Ottoman, and Russian historical peripheries in Eurasia to demonstrate that, ultimately, it is the strength of regional ties that determine the political resilience of ensuing states."--Fatma Muge Gocek, University of Michigan
"Anna Ohanyan's highly creative and ambitious study could not be more timely. The Neighborhood Effect reveals how regional susceptibility to conflict owes itself to social fault lines lingering from empires predating contemporary state formation. This book is essential for understanding the enduring role of empire and hierarchy across a diverse range of contemporary regional orders."--Alexander Cooley, Barnard College, Columbia University
"Anna Ohanyan's intellectual courage makes this fascinating book particularly valuable for the reader seeking to make sense of our shifting global order. She plumbs the depths of the historical record, analyzes the contested meanings of today's geopolitical realignments, and does not shy away from hinting at the future directions of Eurasia's political realities."--Stephen B. Riegg, Texas A&M University
"In this bold new study, Anna Ohanyan looks beyond the state to a world of neighborhoods forged in the peripheries of Eurasia's historical empires. To understand regional patterns of conflict and cooperation, Ohanyan argues, one needs to examine the nature of social connections within and between ethno-religious communities prior to contemporary statehood. The Neighborhood Effect's rich combination of history, theory, and comparison makes it a landmark contribution to Eurasian security studies."--Brian D. Taylor, Syracuse University
"While many scholars have highlighted the impact of imperial legacies on contemporary conflicts, The Neighborhood Effect deepens and broadens our understanding of these legacies and their impacts. Illustrating how belligerents in current Eurasian conflicts are embedded in regional contexts shaped by their previous history as imperial peripheries, the book explains why some regions emerge as conflict zones while others achieve political stability."--Sandra Halperin, University of London
"Anna Ohanyan in her ambitious study of Eurasian conflict after the end of the Cold War, combines a close examination of history with a political scientist's search for predictive patterns. In The Neighborhood Effect, Anna Ohanyan argues the post-Soviet framework is an inadequate explanation for the variety of conflict-types we see on the Eurasian continent today, and looks for the sources of these ethno-territorial conflicts in older imperial political and social patterns in the Ottoman, Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires. It is a fascinating read."--Stephen Jones, Director of the Program on Georgia Studies, Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard