University of Glasgow
Status: Public Research University
Abbreviation: Glas.
Phone +44 (0) 141 330 2000
Email student.recruitment@glasgow.ac.uk
Website https://www.gla.ac.uk/
Address University Avenue, G12 8QQ, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom,
Contact Person Rita Rae (Rector), Dame Katherine Grainger (Chancellor)
Department
People
Bibliography
Post-Communist civil society and the soviet legacy: Challenges of democratisation and reform in the caucasus
Assessing the European Union’s Assistance to Civil Society in Its Eastern Neighbourhood: Lessons from the South Caucasus
Evaluating the efficacy of indigenous forces in counterinsurgency: Lessons from Chechnya and Dagestan
Civil society in the South Caucasus: kinship networks as obstacles to civil participation
Informal networks as sources of human (in)security in the South Caucasus
Examining the Use of Informal Networks by NGOs in Azerbaijan and Georgia
Focused on Iran? Exploring the rationale behind the strategic relationship between Azerbaijan and Israel
Chechnya and Dagestan: Ethnography, History, and Conflicts
Asymmetry of Values, Indigenous Forces, and Incumbent Success in Counterinsurgency: Evidence from Chechnya
Individual Disengagement in Chechnya and Dagestan
Institutional Transformation and Informality in Azerbaijan and Georgia
The Effects of the Saakashvili Era Reforms on Informal Practices in the Republic of Georgia
Post-Communist Informal Networking: Blat in the South Caucasus
Peace-Building from the Bottom: A Case Study of the North Caucasus
Informal Networks in the South Caucasus’s Societies
Defected and loyal? A case study of counter-defection mechanisms inside Chechen paramilitaries
Why Do De Facto States Fail? Lessons from the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria
Unrecognized states as a means of coercive diplomacy? Assessing the role of Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Russia’s foreign policy in the South Caucasus
Blood Revenge and Violent Mobilization: Evidence from the Chechen Wars
Towards An “Uncivil” Society? Informality and Civil Society in Georgia
Fighting against Jihad? Blood Revenge and Anti-Insurgent Mobilization in Jihadist Civil Wars