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From Kazakhstan Encyclopedia

  • ...eria]], [[Uzbekistan]], [[Krasnodar]], [[Sochi]], and other parts of the [[Post-Soviet states|former Soviet Union]].<ref>Schreck, Carl. [http://www.thenational.ae
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  • The scandal is widely viewed as a turning point in Georgia's post-Soviet evolution. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Georgia was world re
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  • ...RO]]'s Business Japanese Test was not offered in Kazakhstan or any other [[Post-Soviet states|former Soviet Union]] member state {{As of|2006|lc=on}}.<ref name="J
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  • ...tan]]. He jokingly refers to his hometown as the "Korean capital" of the [[Post-Soviet states|former Soviet Union]]. He entered Kazakh National University (now kn ...ean Diaspora in Kazakhstan: Question of Topical Problems for Minorities in Post-Soviet Space. – Newsletter of the Japanese Institute of Area Studies. Osaka, 200
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  • ...-9?changeHeader Legal Aspects of the Regional Integration Processes in the Post-Soviet Area. Berlin-Heidelberg: Springer Verlag, 2009. Summary and Sample Pages].
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  • ...Mikhail. ''Uneasy Alliance: Relations Between Russia and Kazakhstan in the Post-Soviet Era, 1992-1997.'' Greenwood Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0-313-30965-6</ref><ref>
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  • ===Post-Soviet emigration===
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  • ==Post-Soviet Period== ...to the alienation of Russians and the increase of inter-ethnic tensions in post-Soviet Kazakhstan was the government's language policy. Following independence, th
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  • ...고려사람) is the name which [[Korean people|ethnic Koreans]] in the [[post-Soviet states]] use to refer to themselves. The term is composed of two constituen ...人, meaning the same as "Koryo-saram") to refer to ethnic Koreans in the post-Soviet states.<ref name=Byong/> However, the [[Sino-Korean vocabulary|Sino-Korean]
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  • In the Russian Empire, Soviet Union, and the post-Soviet states, the Dungans continue to refer to themselves as the ''Hui people'' (
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  • | align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Post-Soviet <small>(Year)</small>'''
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  • ...vivors lost economic resources and civil rights and, under both Soviet and post-Soviet governments, they have been the objects of both official and unofficial dis
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  • *{{citation|chapter=Uighurs in Post-Soviet Central Asia|last=Kamalov|first=Ablet|title=Central Asia and the Caucasus:
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  • ...ussian Census (2010)|2010 census]]), about 16 million [[ethnic Russians in post-Soviet states]] (8 M in Ukraine, 4.5 M in Kazakhstan, 1 M in Belarus, 0.6 M Latvia ...n former Soviet Union states in 1994]] {{summarize|from|Ethnic Russians in post-Soviet states|section=y|date=July 2016}}
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  • ...kiO'Kane1998">{{cite book|author1=Touraj Atabaki|author2=John O'Kane|title=Post-Soviet Central Asia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KwZpAAAAMAAJ|date=15 Oct
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  • *[[Koryo-saram]], regarding the history and culture of Koreans in [[Post-Soviet states]]
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  • [[Category:Post-Soviet alliances]]
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  • [[Category:Post-Soviet alliances]]
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  • ...oducts/title.aspx?pid=514131 Holding-Together Regionalism: Twenty Years of Post-Soviet Integration]. Libman A. and Vinokurov E. (Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2012, ...ately after the break-up of the Soviet Union to salvage economic ties with Post-Soviet states through the creation of the [[Commonwealth of Independent States]] o
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  • [[Category:Post-Soviet alliances]]
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