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Disorder over the border: spinning the spectre of instability through time and space in Central Asia

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  • Natalie Koch

Abstract

Across Eurasia, authoritarian leaders have sought to justify their ‘strong-hand’ approach to government by framing instability as a security threat and the strong state as a guarantor of political stability. Such ‘regimes of certainty’ promote a modernist valorization of order, the flip side of which is a demonization of political disorder instability, or mere uncertainty. Examining the spatial and temporal imaginaries underpinning such narratives about in/stability in Central Asia, this paper compares official discourse in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, where state-controlled media and official publications have stigmatized political instability in Kyrgyzstan as indicative of the dangers of political liberalization and a weak state. Ostensibly about the ‘other’, these narratives are also about scripting the ‘self’. I argue that official interpretations of ‘disorder over the border’ in Kyrgyzstan are underpinned by a set of spatial and temporal imaginaries that do not merely reflect regional moral geographies, but actively construct them.

Suggested Citation

  • Natalie Koch, 2018. "Disorder over the border: spinning the spectre of instability through time and space in Central Asia," Central Asian Survey, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 37(1), pages 13-30, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:ccasxx:v:37:y:2018:i:1:p:13-30
    DOI: 10.1080/02634937.2017.1338667
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