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Marsili, M. (2025). Soviet Nationality Conflict: Structural Legacies and Ethnic Conflicts and in the Post-Soviet Space. Review of Human Rights. 11 (1), 55-78
M. Marsili, "Soviet Nationality Conflict: Structural Legacies and Ethnic Conflicts and in the Post-Soviet Space", in Review of Human Rights, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 55-78, 2025
@article{marsili2025_1764921084712,
author = "Marsili, M.",
title = "Soviet Nationality Conflict: Structural Legacies and Ethnic Conflicts and in the Post-Soviet Space",
journal = "Review of Human Rights",
year = "2025",
volume = "11",
number = "1",
pages = "55-78",
url = "https://reviewhumanrights.com/index.php/RHR/index"
}
TY - JOUR TI - Soviet Nationality Conflict: Structural Legacies and Ethnic Conflicts and in the Post-Soviet Space T2 - Review of Human Rights VL - 11 IS - 1 AU - Marsili, M. PY - 2025 SP - 55-78 SN - 2520-7024 UR - https://reviewhumanrights.com/index.php/RHR/index AB - This article examines how Soviet nationalities policy shaped post-Soviet ethnic conflicts. It argues that Soviet ethnofederalism—while promoting nominal autonomy—entrenched ethnic identities and borders, enabling later fragmentation. Using a structural-historical approach, it traces continuities in institutions, elite networks, and symbolic geographies from the USSR to contemporary disputes. Case studies from Transnistria, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Nagorno-Karabakh show how autonomy structures fostered secessionist mobilization. Crimea and Donbas illustrate how Russia has revived Soviet-era institutions and narratives for geopolitical aims. The study reconceptualizes Soviet federalism as a legacy regime, highlighting durable path dependency in identity, legitimacy, and violence, and challenging collapse-as-rupture narratives in favor of continuity in post-imperial politics. ER -
English