
Rustamjon Urinboyev
Associate professor

Living Law and Political Stability in Post-Soviet Central Asia : A Case Study of the Ferghana Valley in Uzbekistan
Author
Summary, in English
This thesis, through a case study of the Ferghana Valley in Uzbekistan, investigates the relationship between welfare and political stability, and thereby aims to contribute to a better understanding of the post-Soviet transformations in Central Asian societies. Another equally important purpose of the thesis is to contribute to theory development in the sociology of law. The thesis seeks to answer the following overarching research question: Given the three suggested means of political stability (coercion, welfare, and informal institutions) that states have at their disposal, what are the possibilities to promote legitimate and long-term political stability in post-Soviet Central Asia?
The thesis employs multiple research methods, consisting of an ethnographic method, a literature review, a socio-legal method, and an historical method. The first-hand data comes from three periods of ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2009 and 2012 in the Ferghana Valley, Uzbekistan. The thesis draws on the concept of ‘living law’, the ‘state-in-society’ approach and the concept of norms to provide a theoretical framework, and model for analysing the empirical data.
The research findings show that due to the obvious failure of the Central Asian governments to address the structural inequalities and market defects, informal welfare structures such as mahalla have come to serve as an alternative source of job creation and social safety nets, and thereby prevent the occurrence of political instability. However, these developments have had far-reaching repercussions for state-society relations and political stability in Central Asia, leading to a crisis of state legitimacy. As a result, the informal structures are quite omnipresent phenomena in Central Asia, while the laws and image of the states have limited meaning in everyday life. Due to this crisis of legitimacy, the political stability in Central Asia has become very shaky, which is why the states in this region increasingly rely on coercion and intimidation as an exclusive means of social control. As the findings indicate, informal welfare structures can provide only short-term solutions to political stability, and thus there is a need for more extensive state-driven welfare measures. Hence, the thesis suggests that strong welfare measures can serve as a legitimate pathway for building long-term political stability in Central Asia.
This is a compilation thesis in sociology of law, which includes four articles, published or forthcoming in international and peer-reviewed journals or scientific anthologies, and an introductory summary containing theoretical, methodological, results and analysis chapters.
Department/s
- Department of Sociology of Law
Publishing year
2013
Language
English
Publication/Series
Lund Studies in Sociology of Law
Volume
40
Full text
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Lund University
Topic
- Law and Society
Keywords
- political stability
- welfare
- living law
- social norms
- sociology of law
- law and society
- mahalla
- Uzbekistan
- Central Asia
- Ferghana Valley
- post-Soviet societies
- ethnography
- socio-legal studies
- corruption
- informal economy
- public administration
- informal institutions
- legitimacy
- state-society relations.
Status
Published
Project
- Living Law and Political Stability in Post-Soviet Central Asia. A Case Study of the Ferghana Valley in Uzbekistan
Supervisor
- Karsten Åström
- Måns Svensson
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1403-7246
- ISBN: 91-7267-350-8
Defence date
15 February 2013
Defence time
13:00
Defence place
Universitetshuset, sal 206, Paradisgatan 2, Lund
Opponent
- David Nelken (Professor)