| The Silk Road Papers
is the Center's Occasional Papers series. Ranging from 50 to
150 pages in length, the Papers are an avenue for the rapid
publication of research in a concise and accessible yet
rigorous manner. An average of six to ten Papers are
produced yearly.
The 2009-11 Bombing Campaign in Georgia: Who Did It, and
Why? March 2012
China and Greater Central Asia: New Frontiers? December 2011
Flirting with State Failure: Power and Politics in
Kyrgyzstan since Independence, July 2011
International Law and the Post-2008 Status Quo in Georgia:
Implications for Western Policies, May 2011
Afghanistan Beyond the Fog of Nation Building: Giving
Economic Strategy a Chance, January 2011
Between Hesitation and Commitment: The EU and Georgia after
the 2008 War, November 2010
Reconciling Statism with Freedom: Turkey's Kurdish Opening,
October 2010
The Key to Success in Afghanistan: A Modern Silk Road
Strategy, May 2010
Foreign Religious Education and the Central Asian Islamic
Revival: Impact and Prospects for Stability, March 2010
Between Fact and Fantasy: Turkey's Ergenekon Investigation,
August 2009
Labor Migration in Central Asia: Implications of the Global
Economic Crisis, May 2009
Dismantling Totalitarianism? Turkmenistan under
Berdimuhamedow, March 2009
State Approaches to National Integration in Georgia: Two
Perspectives, February 2009
Prospects for a 'Torn' Turkey: A Secular and Unitary Future?
October 2008
Russia's Central Asia Policy and the Role of Russian
Nationalism, April 2008
Kazakhstan's Emerging Middle Class, March 2008
Economic and Energy Security: Connecting Europe and the
Black Sea-Caspian Region, March 2008
National Ideology and State-building in Kyrgyzstan and
Tajikistan, January 2008
Gazprom's Monopoly and Nabucco's Potentials: Strategic
Decisions for Europe, November 2007
The August 6 Bombing Incident in Georgia: Implications for
the Euro-Atlantic Region, October 2007
The Economic Aspects of the Chinese-Central Asia
Rapprochement, September 2007
The Wider Black Sea Region: An Emerging Hub in European
Security, December 2006
The Politicization of Islam in Azerbaijan, October 2006
The State-Crime Nexus in Central Asia: State Weakness, Organized
Crime and Corruption in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, October 2006
Minorities and the State in the South Caucasus: Assessing the
Protection of National Minorities, September 2006
Islamic Radicalism in Central Asia and the Caucasus:
Implications for the EU, July 2006
Central Asia's Economy: Mapping Future Prospects to 2015, July
2006
The Caucasus: A Challenge for Europe, June 2006
Clans, Authoritarian Rulers, and Parliaments in Central Asia,
June 2006
Anatomy of a Crisis: U.S.-Uzbekistan Relations, 2001-2005,
February 2006
Kyrgyzstan: The Path Forward, November 2005
Violence in Andijan, 13 May 2005: An Independent Assessment,
July 2005
China and Afghan Opiates: Assessing the Risk, June 2005
A
'Greater Central Asia Partnership' for Afghanistan and Its
Neighbors, March 2005
Developing Counter-Narcotics Policy in Central Asia: Legal and
Political Dimensions, January 2005
U.S. Afghanistan Policy: It's Working, October 2004
Regional Security in the South Caucasus: The Role of NATO, April
2004
The Xinjiang Problem, December 2003
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