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Mongolia: Signatures and types of security
October 24, 2007 3 min. read

Mongolia recently received its Millenium Challenge Corporation grant from the United States.  There was a ceremony and press conference on October 22 with President Enkhbayar of Mongolia and President Bush of the United States at the White House.  These were some of President Enkhbayar's words, which well express the MCC aims of transparency, democracy, and poverty reduction: […]

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Central Asia, World: New World Bank activities, outlooks
October 23, 2007 2 min. read

International Community News: Since The World Bank (the affectionate name for the United Nations’ International Bank for Reconstruction & Development or IBRD)  is having their annual meetings this month, there's a lot of development news out there.  Central Asian governments who want to access the Bank's programs need to know what priorities the Bank is currently […]

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Public Health: HIV rates reported in Tashkent
October 22, 2007 2 min. read

Several times this year I have mentioned the burden that non-collection/non-publication of public health statistics places on neighbor states attempting to wrestle with epidemics.  This is true for Central Asia in terms of at least two issues: HIV and Avian H5N1.  Both Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan have been working through big problems with medical care and […]

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Kyrgyzstan's Fifth Constitutional Referendum Passes
October 22, 2007 3 min. read

Yesterday, October 21, 2007, the Kyrgyzstani people went to the polls to vote on a new Constitution–for the fifth time.  Previous referendums occurred under President Akaev in 1994, 1996, 1998, and 2003–the last one, combined with perceived/gigantic election fraud of 2005, sent Akaev into exile in the Russian Federation.  This will be Mr. Bakiev's first […]

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Casual Friday (well, Saturday): Akhal-Teke horses
October 20, 2007 1 min. read

In the Central Asia Beat, I referred to the Akhal-Teke horse, and then I found some video footage.  This horse show video shows a lot of the conformation, coloring, and other physical points of the breed–at its first European horse show in June of this year, in Luxembourg.  There's no plot per se: it's a […]

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Central Asia Beat, October 15-21
October 20, 2007 6 min. read

I’m afraid the Central Asia Beat was beyond my poor capabilities while in Central America.  There just wasn't good enough Internet access to do the research–and frankly, this “Foust Format” takes hours with a good connection.  However, it's worth it: you get a really good sense of what's going on, yeah?  Hope it's useful to more […]

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Turkey & the West: Implications for Central Asia
October 19, 2007 5 min. read

Well, it's been going on for at least three years: a persistent damaging, punitive group of slights by the West to one of its best friends.  This past week it's gone from insulting to abusive, so it's really past time to say something.  These are the events: 1. Turkey, continually worried at the conflict pressures on their southern border, is poised to […]

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Turkmenistan: Private property, transparency
October 17, 2007 2 min. read

According to Gundogar, that retrieved the news from Associated Press: Turkmenistan allows foreign investors to own companies, property The president adopted legislation allowing foreign investors to create companies and own property in Turkmenistan ‚ moving the natural gas-rich country further from the isolation imposed by his autocratic predecessor. An amended law on foreign investment, adopted […]

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When you want to work: Central Asia
October 17, 2007 4 min. read

Every year a couple of stories come out about serf labor in the cotton fields of Central Asia, right about the time that the cotton crop gets harvested.  That day has again arrived this year, but with new, tougher problems for Central Asia's agricultural laborers and for the state leaders that have made this choice. […]

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Winter Flu: the H5N1 mystery
October 16, 2007 4 min. read

According to a nurse I know and trust: Medical practitioners in the United States are gearing up for a possible world flu epidemic, and H5N1 is on everyone's mind.  A large flu epidemic, on the scale of the 1919 pandemic, would curtail essential services (utilities, fire and police protection, other) in developed states.  One is left […]

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FSU: Those colorful revolutions
October 15, 2007 3 min. read

Now that I’m back from Latin America, I’m catching up on my Central Asia reading, and I found a new great article in the American Political Science Association's Perspectives on Politics. Tucker, J. (2007, September).  Enough! Electoral fraud, collective action problems, and post-communist colored revolutions.  Perspective on Politics 5 (3), 535-550.  This article has a […]

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Casual Friday: Kazakhstan, space invader
October 12, 2007 2 min. read

A curious mix of science, publicity, politics, engineering, and Big Bucks:  no, not a new Matrix movie.  Instead, the latest installment of business/political cooperation into the stratosphere continues to develop, a legend in the making and well worth our attention.  Yesterday, a new Russian space flight from Kazakhstan's Baikonur, with a crew of many nations.  According to […]

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