May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General Assembly

Since the demise of the USSR in 1991, the five Central Asian republics have joined a number of international organisations, most notably the UN. However, while their membership in this organisation is often taken for granted and used by scholarship on Central Asia as an example of their “race to mem...

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Main Author: Filippo Costa-Buranelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2014-07-01
Series:Journal of Eurasian Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1879366514000037
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author Filippo Costa-Buranelli
author_facet Filippo Costa-Buranelli
author_sort Filippo Costa-Buranelli
collection DOAJ
description Since the demise of the USSR in 1991, the five Central Asian republics have joined a number of international organisations, most notably the UN. However, while their membership in this organisation is often taken for granted and used by scholarship on Central Asia as an example of their “race to membership”, few studies if none have addressed not only how these state relate themselves to the organisation, but also how they behave in it and what norms they support in it. By using the theoretical lenses of the English School and by adopting a multi-method analysis based on qualitative and quantitative strategies, this paper seeks to shed light on the normative stands of these states as expressed within the General Assembly, on whether common positions and strategies exist and on what the degree of their normative convergence is. Findings reveal that all Central Asian states favour a Westphalian world order, that among them there is high convergence on pluralist norms of international society, and that while their record of regional cooperation is poor, they tend to agree on many issues at the international level.
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spelling doaj.art-b69f92ee7ba44dccb7e0c25e9d44ae902022-12-22T00:50:10ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Eurasian Studies1879-36652014-07-015213114410.1016/j.euras.2014.05.002May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General AssemblyFilippo Costa-BuranelliSince the demise of the USSR in 1991, the five Central Asian republics have joined a number of international organisations, most notably the UN. However, while their membership in this organisation is often taken for granted and used by scholarship on Central Asia as an example of their “race to membership”, few studies if none have addressed not only how these state relate themselves to the organisation, but also how they behave in it and what norms they support in it. By using the theoretical lenses of the English School and by adopting a multi-method analysis based on qualitative and quantitative strategies, this paper seeks to shed light on the normative stands of these states as expressed within the General Assembly, on whether common positions and strategies exist and on what the degree of their normative convergence is. Findings reveal that all Central Asian states favour a Westphalian world order, that among them there is high convergence on pluralist norms of international society, and that while their record of regional cooperation is poor, they tend to agree on many issues at the international level.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1879366514000037UNCentral AsiaEnglish SchoolPluralismGeneral AssemblyInternational Society
spellingShingle Filippo Costa-Buranelli
May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General Assembly
Journal of Eurasian Studies
UN
Central Asia
English School
Pluralism
General Assembly
International Society
title May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General Assembly
title_full May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General Assembly
title_fullStr May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General Assembly
title_full_unstemmed May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General Assembly
title_short May we have a say? Central Asian states in the UN General Assembly
title_sort may we have a say central asian states in the un general assembly
topic UN
Central Asia
English School
Pluralism
General Assembly
International Society
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1879366514000037
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