48 research outputs found
Who Sets the Agenda? Analyzing Key Actors and Dynamics of Economic Diversification in Kazakhstan Throughout 2011â2016
This contribution attempts to answer the key question: Who sets the agenda for economic diversification in the context of Kazakhstan? This question remains critical in current scholarly debates. Although Kazakhstan, a young post-Soviet developing nation, has received fair scholarly attention with regard to the agenda setting stage of the policy cycle, the existing literature has yet failed to (1) empirically establish who actually sets the agenda for a certain policy issue and (2) employ the Internet research methods. This paper seeks to fill these gaps. The literature review of Kazakh-specific agenda setting publications suggests that among the major actors, the government tends to exert predominant influence, though other actors may also play a role, for example, media and academia. This research is driven by Internet penetration rate data and focuses on the period from January 2011 until December 2016. The findings lead to two key conclusions. First, think tanks seem to set the government agenda for economic diversification policy in Kazakhstan. Second, the government, while exhibiting the larger agenda setting magnitude vis-Ă -vis the other actors, shapes the subsequent debates as measured by the number of relevant references in media, think tanks, and academic publications. This research seeks to contribute to existing agenda setting theories in the Internet era by defining the most important actor(s), specifically in the Kazakh context based on longitudinal dynamics in attention
Living Law, Legal Pluralism, and Corruption in Post-Soviet Uzbekistan
This paper aims to explore the multifaceted meaning, logic, and morality of informal transactions in order to better understand the social context that informs the meaning of corruption and bribery in post-Soviet Uzbekistan. It will be argued that the informal transactions in Uzbek society reflect different cultural and functional meanings from those in most of the Western world, and hence transactions that from a Western-centric perspective would be labelled as bribes can be morally accepted transactions in the Uzbek cultural context. If this is true, there may be reasons to re-evaluate the relevance of the Western-centric interpretations of corruption in the context of Uzbekistan, and possibly other Central Asian countries. These issues will be investigated with reference to observations and informal interviews from post-Soviet Uzbekistan. This study is based on three periods of ethnographic field research between 2009 and 2012 in the Ferghana Province of Uzbekistan. It draws on concepts of âliving lawâ and legal pluralism to provide a theoretical framework
The political ontology of collaborative water governance
This article examines the various definitions of, and analytical approaches to, collaborative water governance (CWG). While the conceptâs usage has increased over the past decade, there lacks any deep engagement with the concept of the political at the heart of CWG. This article argues that contemporary approaches to CWG risk emptying the concept of its utility and coherence. Correcting this deficiency requires a focus on the social and ideational constructions of water. This will strengthen future collaborative water arrangements and enable deeper appreciation of the ways the political makes and remakes what is possible in water governance
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Adapting agricultural water use to climate change in a post-Soviet context: challenges and opportunities in southeast Kazakhstan
The convergence of climate change and post-Soviet
socio-economic and institutional transformations has been
underexplored so far, as have the consequences of such convergence on crop agriculture in Central Asia. This paper provides a place-based analysis of constraints and opportunities for adaptation to climate change, with a specific focus on water use, in two districts in southeast Kazakhstan. Data were collected by 2 multi-stakeholder participatory workshops, 21 semi-structured in-depth interviews, and secondary statistical data. The present-day agricultural system is characterised by
enduring Soviet-era management structures, but without state inputs that previously sustained agricultural productivity. Low margins of profitability on many privatised farms mean that attempts to implement integrated water management have produced water users associations unable to maintain and upgrade a deteriorating irrigation infrastructure. Although actors
engage in tactical adaptation measures, necessary structural adaptation of the irrigation system remains difficult without significant public or private investments. Market-based water management models have been translated ambiguously to this region, which fails to encourage efficient water use and hinders adaptation to water stress. In addition, a mutual interdependence of informal networks and formal institutions characterises both state governance and everyday life in Kazakhstan. Such interdependence simultaneously facilitates
operational and tactical adaptation, but hinders structural adaptation, as informal networks exist as a parallel system that achieves substantive outcomes while perpetuating the inertia and incapacity of the state bureaucracy. This article has relevance for critical understanding of integrated water management in practice and adaptation to climate change in post-Soviet institutional settings more broadly
Elucidating the mechanism of ferrocytochrome c heme disruption by peroxidized cardiolipin
The interaction of peroxidized cardiolipin with
ferrocytochrome c induces two kinetically and chemically
distinct processes. The first is a rapid oxidation of ferrocytochrome
c, followed by a slower, irreversible disruption
of heme c. The oxidation of ferrocytochrome c by peroxidized
cardiolipin is explained by a Fenton-type reaction.
Heme scission is a consequence of the radical-mediated
reactions initiated by the interaction of ferric heme iron
with peroxidized cardiolipin. Simultaneously with the
heme c disruption, generation of hydroxyl radical is
detected by EPR spectroscopy using the spin trapping
technique. The resulting apocytochrome c sediments as a
heterogeneous mixture of high aggregates, as judged by
sedimentation analysis. Both the oxidative process and the
destructive process were suppressed by nonionic detergents
and/or high ionic strength. The mechanism for generating
radicals and heme rupture is presented
The Anti-Apoptotic Bcl-xL Protein, a New Piece in the Puzzle of Cytochrome C Interactome
A structural model of the adduct between human cytochrome c and the human
anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-xL, which defines the protein-protein
interaction surface, was obtained from solution NMR chemical shift perturbation
data. The atomic level information reveals key intermolecular contacts
identifying new potentially druggable areas on cytochrome c and
Bcl-xL. Involvement of residues on cytochrome c other than those
in its complexes with electron transfer partners is apparent. Key differences in
the contact area also exist between the Bcl-xL adduct with the Bak
peptide and that with cytochrome c. The present model provides insights to the
mechanism by which cytochrome c translocated to cytosol can be intercepted, so
that the apoptosome is not assembled
Water sector governance: a return ticket to anarchy
A political-science perspective of anarchy holds that anarchy is the absence of a ruler. In the water sector, especially in terms of irrigated agriculture, emerging defciencies of public irrigation systems as well as the budget crisis of governments to sustain irrigated agriculture, resulted into increased water user participation. Understanding the apparently increasing smidgeon of anarchy in the water sector includes the appreciation of the complexity of water governance developments such as the introduction of Participatory Irrigation Management (PIM), Irrigation Management Transfer (IMT), basin councils, Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) and Multi-Stakeholder Platforms (MSP), as well as the limited role of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and grassroots organisations (GROs), for decades considered the âmagic bullet' in taking over and providing state services to the public. We conclude that governance is anarchy by other means