Survey							
                            
		                
		                * Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Central Asia 2 Independent countries before 1991 6 former Soviet republics 3 Autonomous regions of China Kazakhstan Mongolia Azerbaijan Kyrgyzstan Xinjiang Tajikistan Afghanistan Tibet Inner Mongolia Introduction  Geopolitical  void Long obscured by Russian and Chinese domination  Low economic link  Arid physical environments  Currently, key area of geopolitical and economic competition  Al Qaeda training camp  Discovery of oil/gas reserves Environmental Geography Steppes, Deserts, and Threatened Lakes of the Eurasian Heartland Central Asia’s Physical Regions Northern Steppes Central Deserts Southern Highlands Southern Highlands  Highest and most extensive mountains in the world  Collision of the Indian subcontinent into the Asian mainland  Tibetan Plateau Extensive uplands between Hymalayas and Kunlun Shan; averaged around 15,000 feet  Origin of many rivers   Indus, Ganges, Mekong, Yangtze, and Huang He River Central Deserts  Western desert belt elevation  Larger rivers  Eastern  Higher elevation  Smaller river  Lower  Kara Kum Desert  Kyzyl Kum Desert  Caspian/Aral Sea Basin desert belt Tien Shan Pamir Mt.  Taklamakan  Gobi Desert  Tarim Basin Desert Northern Steppes  Between desert zone and taiga  Extensive pastures  Northern Kazakstan, Northern/central Mongolia  Dominance of dry climate Deserts  Steppes  Arid highlands   Pronounced continentality Environmental issues  Desertification Aridity  Salinization  Desiccation The Shrinking of the Aral Sea 1973 1987 2000 The Shrinking of the Aral Sea  Cause  Diversion of rivers nearby (irrigation projects)  eg. Kara Kum Canal  Consequences  Ecological devastation  Economic damage: Fisheries, agricultural yields  Public health: High infant and maternal death Population and Settlement Settled Oases amid Vacant Lands  Most of Central Asia is sparsely populated  Highland  Too is largely uninhabited arid or too high to support human life  Lowland (Desert, Steppe)  Concentrated population along the river valleys Importance of mountains  For migratory pastoralists  Transhumance  For sedentary farmers  Source of water and wood supplies Tarim Basin  Most of the inhabitants of Central Asian deserts live in the narrow belt where the mountains meet the basins and plains Farmland in Uzbekistan Steppe pastoralism Migration of Han-Chinese High TFR in Afghanistan     Unparalleled high TFR in Afghanistan Higher TFR compared to other former Soviet zones  Islam Different TFR within Islamic countries  urbanization Low TFR in Tibet  monasticism & polyandry Recent migration and refugee flows    Return of ethnic Russians to Russia Influx of Han Chinese into western China Refugees from Afghanistan, and Tibet Urbanization in ancient/medieval time Mercantile centers Silk Road Samarkand, Uzbekistan Urbanization under communist rule Administrative cities Hohot, Inner Mongolia Cultural Coherence and Diversity A Meeting Ground of Disparate Traditions Historic overview of Central Asia 1000 B.C. Birthplace of IndoEuropean peoples? 0 13c 7c Replaced by Tibetan Conquered by Altaic peoples kingdom Mongol Empire The Mongol Empire of the 1200s Geography of language Altaic Indo-European Tibetan Geography of language  Influx of Han-Chinese into autonomous regions threatens the sphere of indigenous languages in Inner Mongolia: Mongolian  Xinjiang: Uygur  Tibet: Tibetan   Crossroad of disparate ethnic groups (Indo-European & Altaic peoples) creates ethnic complexity in Tajikistan: dialects of Persian, etc…  Afghanistan: Pashtuns, etc…  Afghanistan’s ethnic patchwork Geography of religion Islam Lamaist Buddhism Islamic fundamentalism Afghan women in public Lamaist Buddhism  Mongolia, Tibet  Buddhism merged with the indigenous religion  Theocracy  Dedication to monasticism  Persecution under communist rule (1959) Geopolitical Framework Political Reawakening in a Power Void Partitioning of the Steppes  Power struggle between sedentary and nomadic groups (16c ~ 18c)  victory of sedentary states: China and Russia bordering the Steppes  Manchu (Ch’ing) dynasty (1644-1912)   Captured Mongolia, Xinjiang, Tibet, eastern Kazakstan Russian Empire (17c – 1917)  Kazakstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan Central Asia was partitioned by Russia and China by the early 1900s with buffer states bordering British-ruled states Russia China British Central Asia under communist rule  Soviet Union (1922)  Union republics  became independent states (1991)  Mongolia  China (1924) (1949)  Autonomous regions Current geopolitical tension  The former Soviet republics Kazakstan: Nationalistic effort of Kazaks against ethnic Russian in north  Tajikistan: war between secular lowland Tajik and Muslim mountain Tajik  Azerbaijan: invasion of Armenia in west   Autonomous regions in western China Tibet: Tibetan’s protest against Chinese rule  Xinjiang: Uygur’s opposition to Chinese use of their homeland for nuclear testing, and suppression of religion  War in Afghanistan  1978-89 Invasion of Soviet Union  1995-97 Taliban (young Muslim religious students)  2001 U.S.’s war against Al Qaeda and Taliban  2002 Interim government in Kabul; other areas are controlled by local warlords International dimensions of Central Asian tension  Since 1991, Central Asia emerged as a key arena of geopolitical tension  A number of important countries, including China, Russia, Pakistan, Iran, Turkey, and U.S. vied for power and influence in the region  9/11 completely changed the balance of power in the region Economic and Social Development Abundant Resources, Devastated Economies One of the least prosperous regions of the world  Economic collapse in 1990s  end of Soviet subsidies  The post-communist economies 7 former communist economies Kazakhstan Azerbaijan Mongolia Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan    Economic liberalization since 1991 With the exception of Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan Agricultural base eg. Uzbekistan (3rd largest cotton exporter) Large deposits of oil and natural gas eg. Azerbaijan, Kazakstan, Turmenistan Oil development in Azerbaijan The economy of Tibet and Xinjiang Autonomous regions of China Xinjiang Tibet    Tibet: Relatively isolated from the Chinese/global economy Xinjiang: Large oil reserves, Dominance of Han Chinese New transportation project that connects eastern China Ethnic tension in Xinjiang Economic misery in Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghanistan One of the weakest economies in the world  Production of illicit drugs in the late 1990s  War-torn economy (Taliban, US bombing campaign)  Global linkages: direct foreign investment    Influential countries have proposed different routes such that they can favor their interests   High level of social indicator in the former Soviet republics  legacy of social program enacted by socialist regime Afghanistan ranks the lowest  warfare, low connectivity Social conditions and the status of women in Afghanistan  Afghan  15 6 women lead highly constrained lives percent adult female literacy million Afghan refugees in neighboring states  Pakistan, Iran…