Belarus: a denationalized nation
In: Postcommunist states and nations
Abstract
"In any assessment and understanding of Belarus, the key questions to address include: Why has Belarus apparently rejected independence under its first president, Alyaksandr Lukashenka, and sought a union with Russia? Why has the government rejected democracy, infringed the human rights of its citizens, and fundamentally altered its Constitution in favor of presidential authority? Has the country made any progress toward market reforms? How have Russia and the West responded to the actions of Belarus? What is the future likely to hold for its ten million citizens? The author's conclusions, which are based on a full examination of political, economic, and social life in the new post-Soviet Republic of Belarus, are optimistic. Belarus, he believes, will survive into the 21st century, but as a Eurasian rather than European state."--Jacket
Verfügbarkeit
Themen
Sprachen
Englisch
Verlag
Harwood Academic
ISBN
9781134411900, 1134411901, 9057023423, 9789057023422, 9057023431, 9789057023439
Seiten
xiv, 139
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