Tajikistan

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    Tajikistan

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    Republic of Tajikistan Tajikistan (officially the Republic of Tajikistan) is a mountainous landlocked country in Central Asia. Afghanistan borders it to the south, Uzbekistan to the west, Kyrgyzstan to the north, and People's Republic of China to the east. Tajikistan also lies adjacent to Pakistan's Chitral and the Gilgit-Baltistan region, separated by the narrow Wakhan Corridor

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    Tajikistan gained its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 and in its short life has already seen considerable amounts of turmoil. When it was first declared a sovereign nation it was plunged very quickly in to civil war. The war led to a quick decline in the nation’s economy. This war crippled the nation leaving Tajikistan very weak in the June of 1997 when the war finally drew to a close. This civil war weakened Tajikistan’s legitimate economy and left many people to “rely on the revenues

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    paper presents scientific briefing about “Conservation of Water Resource in Republic of Tajikistan to the Committee of Environmental Protection under the Government of Tajikistan. This paper will explore country’s profile on water resources. Moreover, it will discuss impacts of Global Warming on water resources in Tajikistan, and present possible solution for water resources management. Overview: Tajikistan is one of the world’s vulnerable regions to climate change, specifically to the effects

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    The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) covers more than three fifths of the Eurasian landmass and represents one fourth of the world population. In that sense it is the biggest security organisation in the world next to the UN (Oldberg 2007:13). The SCO is also the only international security organisation where China is a member and the US is not. Central Asia is at the centre of the organisation both in a geographical and political sense. Central Asia is a place where the strategic interests

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    Nowadays Russia feels itself a hegemon if not empire since they not intervening in interior affairs of state but supports loyal leaders. Russian interventionist potential by providing example of peripheral conflicts which held in Chechnya, Tajikistan, Moldova, and Georgia. His main argument is that Russia uses weakness of regimes, poorly-integrated societies, and minuscule militaries; to join peripheral conflicts and promote its interests. Example of trans-Dniester region where Russian military

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    para. 1). The President of Uzbekistan, Islam Karimov, nervously tried to negotiate with Adolate, but later forced the group out of Uzbekistan (Sanderson, T., Kimmage, D., & Gordon, D., 2010). The Adolate fled arrest in Uzbekistan and moved to Tajikistan where it supported the United Tajik Opposition

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    organisation. As stated at the Moscow Summit in 2003, the SCO’s view is that today it is more important than ever to pool the efforts of the international community in a search for ways of jointly building a structure and architecture of international security for that 21st century that would be acceptable to all nations. Mention the member countries and other nations with different statuses. Organising the SCO: structure and working Today the organisation is a permanent and fully intergovernmental

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    Greek society put forth some of histories greatest works of writing, producing some of histories greatest sources in which granted insight into both their own culture and society and that o other civilizations of their time. Out of Greece came such a great writer and historian as Xenophon who through his military experience was able to gain insight into the inner workings of Persian society and culture under the rule of Cyrus. His authoring of the work Cyropaedia and other Persian related sources

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    branch of the independent Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan. er family still was faced with harassment, insults and physical assaults by people who believed them to be related to enemies of the people. (www.hrw.org) Freedom of Expression - Tajikistan Tajikistan is the only one of the two countries which is taking actions to improve the suppression as shown when it was ranked 155 out of 180 on the World Press Freedom Index. (www.rsf.com) It has gone up 8 places since 2013 which compared to the counties

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    authority over the historiography and in return gave some limited rights. It seems like a modern version of state contract, where citizens gave up some rights in order to enjoy others. Vejdani’s book is a great source of understanding how modern nation states were created in the Persian region. It also explains what it meant for those countries to become a nation state and what steps were necessary to take in order to create a nation. He shows evidence from Qajar’s dynasty that took step

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