Alexander Cooley is director, Harriman Institute, Columbia University, and the Clare Tow Professor of Political Science, Barnard College. John Heathershaw is associate professor of international relations, University of Exeter.
This ambitious and eye-opening book shows what political science at its best - based on real-world knowledge, free of jargon and focused on substantive concerns rather than disciplinary marginalia - can contribute to pressing contemporary debates. -Ricardo Soares de Oliveira, TLS Dictators without Borders is mandatory reading for those wishing to understand the power dynamics in the region, without falling into the trap of erroneously viewing Central Asia as a region that is closed off from the rest of the world. -Ana-Maria Anghelescu, Journal of Soviet & Post-Soviet Politics & Society Among a growing body of literature on the politics of Central Asia's post- soviet states, Cooley and Heathershaw's book occupies a distinctive position. [. . . ] The book provides a platform for future theoretical and empirical work on the interplay between global and domestic structural factors and agency in promoting, sustaining, and, perhaps, challenging dictators without borders. -Dinissa Duvanova, Canadian-American Slavic Studies Dictators Without Borders was shortlisted for the Central Eurasian Studies Society 2018 book award. This insightful, ground-breaking book goes to the heart of why such governments are among the worst human rights abusers in the world-all the more reason it should be widely read. -Hugh Williamson, Europe & Central Asia director, Human Rights Watch 'This book shines an important light on the role international financial centres such as London play in facilitating grand corruption and reinforces the urgent need to address this continuing financial system weakness.'- Tom Keatinge, Director, Centre for Financial Crime & Security Studies at RUSI Insightful and topical-a comprehensive take on a neglected region. -Edward Lucas, senior editor, Economist 'This panoramic survey of cronyism and corruption in five Central Asian republics delivers a sobering insight into how the dictators in this quarter salt away their ill-gotten gains in offshore funds. But the greatest shock comes from revelations about the apparent complicity or indifference of Western companies, banks, regulators and politicians.' - Tristram Riley-Smith, Director of Research, Department of Politics & International Studies, University of Cambridge