SOAS University of London

Status: public research university

Phone +44 20 7637 2388

Website https://www.soas.ac.uk/

Address 10 Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, WC1H 0XG, London, United Kingdom,

Contact Person Baroness Valerie Amos (Director), ( )

Department Centre of Contemporary Central Asia & the Caucasus

People

Farideh Heyat Laurence Broers


Bibliography
Globalization and changing gender norms in Azerbaijan
New Veiling in Azerbaijan: gender and globalising Islam
Azeri Women in Transition: Women in Soviet and Post-Soviet Azerbaijan
Resourcing de facto jurisdictions: A theoretical perspective on cases in the South Caucasus
After the ‘revolution’: civil society and the challenges of consolidating democracy in Georgia
Filling the void: ethnic politics and nationalities policy in post-conflict Georgia
Cartographic exhibitionism? visualizing the territory of Armenia and Karabakh
The limits of leadership: Elites and societies in the Nagorny Karabakh peace process
‘David and Goliath’and ‘Georgians in the Kremlin’: a post-colonial perspective on conflict in post-Soviet Georgia
Recognising politics in unrecognised states: 20 years of enquiry into the de facto states of the South Caucasus
Containing the nation, building the state: coping with nationalism, minorities and conflict in post-Soviet Georgia
Who are the Mingrelians? Language, identity and politics in Western Georgia
Opening Borders, Preserving Walls: Opportunities to Support the Karabakh Peace Process
From “frozen conflict” to enduring rivalry: reassessing the Nagorny Karabakh conflict
Nagorno-Karabakh’s Summer of Violence
Unpacking the meta-conflict: claims to sovereignty, self-determination and territorial integrity in the Georgian--Abkhazian conflict.
Exploring the Caucasus in the 21st Century: Essays on Culture, History and Politics in a Dynamic Context
Diffusion and default: a linkage and leverage perspective on the Nagorny Karabakh conflict
Mirrors to the World: The Claims to Legitimacy and International Recognition of De Facto States in the South Caucasus
Editors’ introduction: A new scholarly voice for a dynamic region