1 Table of Contents 2 Acknowledgments 3 Permissions 4 Dedication 5 List of Abbreviations Chapter 6 Introduction: Of Khans and Kremlins: Tatarstan, Sovereignty and the Future of Ethno-Federalism in Russia Chapter 7 1. The Road to Sovereignty in Tatarstan Chapter 8 2. Projecting Sovereignty in the Russian Federation Under Yeltsin: Federation-Building or Federation-Wrecking Chapter 9 3. Projecting Sovereignty at Home and Abroad: Internal and External State-Building in Tatarstan and Its Impact on Russian Federalism Chapter 10 4. Projecting the Nation: Sovereignty Projects, Nation-Building and Ethnocultural Justice in Tatarstan Chapter 11 5. The End of Russian Federalism? Tatarstan's Sovereignty Project under the Putin Administration Chapter 12 6. Khans and Kremlins Revisited: Assessing the Tatarstani Sovereignty Project and Fostering Federalism and Multicultural Justice in Russia Chapter 13 Bibliography
Katherine E. Graney is associate professor and chair of the department of government at Skidmore College.
In this outstanding study of the politics of Russia's largest
minority, Kate Graney details the rise and erosion of what she
calls Tatarstan's 'sovereignty project,' demonstrating how this
self-limiting autonomy, rather than threatening Russia's
territorial integrity, has played a positive role by imbuing
Russian federalism with genuine substance.
*Mark R. Beissinger, Princeton*
This is a well-crafted case study of how post-Soviet Tartarstan—
one of the ethnic units of the Russian Federation— has defined and
implemented what the author refers to as a sovereignty project and
the impact it had on the Russian Federation... The book's greatest
contribution is to the literature on Russian federalism. It is a
welcome and long-awaited departure from the dominant rationalist
accounts of Russian federalism and the predominant view that the
behavior of regional (and federal) actors is merely instrumental
and interest-driven. Graney's analysis allows for a more nuanced
interpretation of regional political action that integrates both
interests and identity as important sources of political
activity.
*The Russian Review, January 2009*
Well organized and well written, this is the only book to date that
offers a detailed narrative of Tatarstan's efforts to defend and
extend its sovereignty. Katherine Graney is the first Western
scholar to write a book in English about post-Soviet Tatarstan and
the 'Tatarstan model,' which is surprising, given the importance of
the topic. Graney also provides a concise overview of the evolution
of federalism in Russia since 1991, including the efforts to
recentralize under Putin. This timely book will be of interest to
scholars of Russian politics, but also to comparative political
scientists and international relations specialists interested in
autonomy movements, ethno-federalism, and the evolving nature of
state sovereignty in the contemporary world.
*Edward W. Walker, Executive Director, Berkeley Program in Soviet
and Post-Soviet Studies, University of California Berkeley*
This book has many assets and invites the reader to read more. A
thorough analytical case study with a theoretical base, this study
would be very useful source for those engaged in (theory-building)
comparative studies. This book is recommended to scholars of the
Russian Federation, post-Soviet space, and to those of federalism
and ethnic relations in general.
*Europe-Asia Studies*
Written by a specialist who knows Tatarstan from within, the book
is useful for political scientists studying sub-state autonomy
movements, the mechanics of ethno-federalism and inter-ethnic
relations especially within other European nations currently facing
the same policy dilemmas.
*Central Eurasian Reader*
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