О нас
Должная осмотрительность в Центральной Азии
Анализ политических рисков событий, связанных с управлением в постсоветской Центральной Азии
Миссия
Central Asia Due Diligence (CADD) является стартапом, некоммерческой организацией, базирующейся в Великобритании, регистрационный номер: 13871522. Миссия CADD заключается в содействии надлежащему управлению, борьбе с коррупцией, политическому и экономическому развитию и региональной безопасности в регионе постсоветской Центральной Азии. Этих целей организация будет добиваться посредством проведения исследований и анализа соответствующих проблем.
Central Asia Due Diligence (CADD) является стартапом, некоммерческой организацией, базирующейся в Великобритании, регистрационный номер: 13871522. Миссия CADD заключается в содействии надлежащему управлению, борьбе с коррупцией, политическому и экономическому развитию и региональной безопасности в регионе постсоветской Центральной Азии. Этих целей организация будет добиваться посредством проведения исследований и анализа соответствующих проблем.
Планируются следующие направления исследований и анализа:
Отраслевой анализ, связанный с борьбой с коррупцией, правами человека и безопасностью.
Due diligence политических режимов – прогнозный анализ существующих тенденций и направлений в эволюции действующих режимов правления.
Формирование базы данных о политически значимых лицах – сбор данных о политически значимых лицах Узбекистана.
2022
Год, когда мы начали
2022-2023
(планируется)
2023-2024
(планируется)
Директор
Алишер Ильхамов
Deniz Kandiyoti
Deniz KANDIYOTI is Emeritus Professor of Development Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies, the founding Chair of the Center of Contemporary Central Asia and the Caucasus at SOAS (2001-2004) and editor-in-chief of Central Asian Survey (2006- 2016). She is the author of Concubines, Sisters and Citizens: Identities and Social Transformation (in Turkish) the editor of Fragments of Culture: The Everyday of Modern Turkey (2002), Gendering the Middle East (1996) , Women, Islam and the State (1991) Gender, Governance and Islam (with Nadje Al-Ali and Kathryn Spellman Poots, 2019) and numerous articles on gender, Islam, post-coloniality, agrarian reforms in post-Soviet Central Asia and gender and conflict in Afghanistan. She has also acted as consultant for UNWomen, UNDP, UNESCO, OSCE, UNIFEM, British Council, DFID and UNRISD
Kristian Lasslett
Kristian LASSLETT is a Professor of Criminology at Ulster University, specialising in the areas of investigative methodologies, state crime and corporate crime. His primary research interests include grand corruption, money laundering, asset recovery and land-grabbing. He is co-founder of the International State Crime Initiative, Joint Editor-in-Chief of the journal State Crime, and Co-Director of UzInvestigations. Kristian has conducted dozens of complex transnational investigations into serious crimes committed by corporate and state actor, with regional specialisms in the Pacific and Central Asia. His most recent monograph was published in 2018 by Routledge, it is entitled Uncovering the Crimes of Urbanisation: Researching Corruption, Violence and Urban Conflict.
Richard E. Messick
Richard E. MESSICK is the co-founder and Senior Contributor to the Global Anticorruption Blog and a consultant to governments, international organizations, development agencies, and non-governmental organizations on legal development and anticorruption issues. As an attorney in the United States he advised political parties, office holders, corporations, and political committees on campaign finance and ethics issues and represented individuals and corporations in state and federal matters involving fraud and corruption. After serving as Chief Counsel of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, he joined the World Bank where he worked until his retirement on legal and judicial reform and anticorruption projects. His writings have appeared in scholarly and popular publications including the American Political Science Review, the World Bank Research Observer, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post.
John Heathershaw
John HEATHERSHAW is Professor of International Relations at the University of Exeter. His research addresses conflict, security, and development in authoritarian political environments, especially in post-Soviet Central Asia. He is author of Post-Conflict Tajikistan (2009), co-author of Dictators Without Borders (Yale 2017) and was principal investigator of major research projects on Rising Powers and Conflict Management (2012-2016), Political Exiles (2015-2020) and Anti-Corruption Evidence (2019-2021). In 2021/22 he is a senior fellow of British Academy studying relations between Eurasian kleptocratic elites and British professional service providers. Heathershaw is a member of the Academic Freedom and Internationalisation Working Group (AFIWG) of the UK which campaigns for transparency and accountability in British universities international relations. He has previously taught at the American University in Central Asia, the London School of Economics, Kings College London, and the University of Notre Dame. Prior to entering academia, Heathershaw was a research analyst at the Ministry of Defence and an aid worker in West Africa and Central Asia. His research has been funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, Department for International Development, Leverhulme Trust, British Academy, and the Open Society Foundations.
Yurii Poita
Yurii POITA is the head of the Asian sections at the Ukraine-based New Geopolitics Research Network and at the Centre for Army, Conversion and Disarmament Studies. In his research he specialises on regional security issues, the socio-political development in Central Asia, China’s influence in the post-Soviet space, as well as the hybrid methods used by some regional powers to promote their geopolitical interests. Yurii Poita was educated at the Zhytomyr Military Institute (Ukraine), with a degree in military sciences, at the Kyiv International University (Master degree in International Relations), and is currently working on his PhD dissertation at the Kazakh National University al-Farabi. Yurii has experience of studying issues related to defence industry, he has worked in and cooperated with a number of Ukrainian, Kazakh and European institutions and think tanks.