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      Nationalism, Ethnic Pressures, and the Breakup of the Soviet Union

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      Journal of Cold War Studies
      MIT Press

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          Abstract

          Nationalism and ethnic pressures contributed to the breakup of the Soviet Union, but they were not the primary cause. A qualified exception to this argument is Russian elite separatist nationalism, led by Boris Yeltsin, which had a direct impact on Soviet disintegration. This article provides an overview of Soviet policy vis-à-vis nationalities, discusses the surge of nationalism and ethnic pressures in the Soviet Union in 1988–1991, and shows how ethnic unrest and separatist movements weakened the Soviet state. It also emphasizes that the demise of the Soviet Union resulted mainly from three other key factors: 1) Mikhail Gorbachev's failure to establish a viable compact between center and periphery in the early years of his rule; 2) Gorbachev's general unwillingness to use decisive force to quell ethnic and nationalist challenges; and 3) the defection of a core group of Russian elites from the Soviet regime.

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          The USSR as a Communal Apartment, or How a Socialist State Promoted Ethnic Particularism

          Soviet nationality policy was devised and carried out by nationalists. Lenin's acceptance of the reality of nations and "national rights" was one of the most uncompromising positions he ever took, his theory of good ("oppressed-nation") nationalism formed the conceptual foundation of the Soviet Union and his NEP-time policy of compensatory "nation-building" (natsional'noe stroitel'stvo) was a spectacularly successful attempt at a state-sponsored conflation of language, "culture," territory and quota-fed bureaucracy.
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            Nationalism and Ethnicity

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              Spiraling to Ethnic War: Elites, Masses, and Moscow in Moldova's Civil War

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Cold War Studies
                Journal of Cold War Studies
                MIT Press
                1520-3972
                1531-3298
                September 2003
                September 2003
                : 5
                : 4
                : 81-136
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Astrid S. Tuminez until recently was associate director for alternative investments at AIG Global Investment Corp. and is currently a visiting scholar at the Harriman Institute, Columbia University.
                Article
                10.1162/152039703322483765
                729ba1ef-6bdd-433a-a4f3-7472b41d5f3e
                © 2003
                History

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