Bringing the ‘formal’ back in: Nur Otan, informal networks and the countering of elite instability in Kazakhstan

Isaacs, Rico (2013) Bringing the ‘formal’ back in: Nur Otan, informal networks and the countering of elite instability in Kazakhstan. Europe-Asia Studies, 65 (6). pp. 1055-1079. ISSN 0966-8136

Full content URL: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/096681...

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Bringing the ‘formal’ back in: Nur Otan, informal networks and the countering of elite instability in Kazakhstan
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Abstract

As opposed to the current literature which argues that informal politics pervades formal institutions in Kazakhstan and Central Asia more widely, this article argues that Nur Otan, the political party of the President of Kazakhstan, acts as a formal institution to counter the instability generated by informal networks competing for access to political and economic resources. This is achieved by consolidating the political parties associated with these networks into Nur Otan and the synchronisation of the party and the state apparatus. However, the extent to which Nur Otan can provide this stabilising function in the long term is dependent upon regime dynamics.

Keywords:Political Parties, Authoritarianism, Informality, post-Soviet politics, Kazakhstan, Neopatrimonialism
Subjects:L Social studies > L240 International Politics
L Social studies > L260 Comparative Politics
L Social studies > L200 Politics
L Social studies > L243 Politics of a specific country/region
Divisions:College of Social Science > School of Social & Political Sciences
ID Code:36909
Deposited On:09 Sep 2019 09:08

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