Ramzan Kadyrov: The Indigenous Key to Success in Putin's Chechenization Strategy?
- 14 August 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Nationalities Papers
- Vol. 36 (4) , 659-687
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00905990802230605
Abstract
On 15 February 2007 Vladimir Putin accepted the resignation of Alu Alkhanov as President of Chechnya and nominated the Chechen prime minister—Ramzan Kadyrov—to act as his successor. This appointment, duly rubber-stamped by Chechnya's parliament, brought to an end to more than four months of speculation since 5 October 2006, when Kadyrov attained the age of 30 and thus became eligible for the post of Chechnya's head of state. Kadyrov's elevation to de jure rather than de facto supremacy in Chechen society not only completed the final stage of the remarkably rapid transformation of this one-time rebel, juvenile thug and politicalingénuebut also put Putin's policy of Chechenization firmly back on track, which had been effectively derailed since the assassination of Chechnya's first pro-Russian president—Akhmad Kadyrov—Ramzan's father, in May 2004.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
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