LEADER 00000cam  2200937Ia 4500 
001    ocn654850438 
003    OCoLC 
005    20171004054354.6 
006    m     o  d         
007    cr cnu---unuuu 
008    100811s2002    enk     ob    001 0 eng d 
020    9781849640701|q(e-book) 
020    184964070X|q(e-book) 
035    (OCoLC)654850438|z(OCoLC)654588655|z(OCoLC)961612046
       |z(OCoLC)962613664 
040    N$T|beng|epn|cN$T|dOCLCE|dOCLCQ|dE7B|dOCLCQ|dOCLCA|dOCLCF
       |dNLGGC|dOCL|dJSTOR|dOCLCQ|dAZK|dCOCUF|dAGLDB|dMOR|dPIFAG
       |dOCLCQ 
049    MAIN 
050  4 HN670.23.A8|bN38 2002eb 
082 04 306/.095845|222 
100 1  Nazpary, Joma. 
245 10 Post-soviet chaos :|bviolence and dispossession in 
       Kazakhstan /|cJoma Nazpary. 
260    London ;|aSterling, Va. :|bPluto Press,|c©2002. 
300    1 online resource (ix, 217 pages) 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
505 0  People and places -- Bardak : elements of chaos. -- 
       Networking as a response to the chaos -- Women and 
       sexualised strategies : violence and stigma -- 
       Construction of the alien : imagining a Soviet community -
       - Ethnic tensions -- Conclusions : whose transition? 
506 1  Unlimited number of concurrent users.|5UkHlHU 
650  0 Post-communism|zKazakhstan. 
650  0 Alienation (Social psychology)|zKazakhstan. 
650  0 Capitalism|zKazakhstan. 
650  0 Women|zKazakhstan|xSocial conditions. 
651  0 Kazakhstan|xSocial conditions|y1991- 
856 40 |uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctt18fs75z|zGo to
       ebook 
936    JSTOR-D-2016/17