Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Republics of the Soviet Union

Republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
CategoryFederated state
Location Soviet Union
Created byTreaty on the Creation of the USSR
Created
  • 30 December 1922
Abolished by
Abolished
  • 26 December 1991
Number21 (as of 1933)
PopulationsSmallest: 1,565,662 (Estonian SSR)
Largest: 147,386,000 (Russian SFSR)
AreasSmallest: 29,800 km2 (11,500 sq mi) (Armenian SSR)
Largest: 17,075,400 km2 (6,592,800 sq mi) (Russian SFSR)
Government
Subdivisions

The Republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics or the Union Republics (Russian: Сою́зные Респу́блики, romanized: Soyúznye Respúbliki) were national-based administrative units of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR).[1] The Soviet Union was formed in 1922 by a treaty between the Soviet republics of Byelorussia, Russian SFSR (RSFSR), Transcaucasian Federation, and Ukraine, by which they became its constituent republics of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (Soviet Union).

For most of its history, the USSR was a one-party state led by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Key functions of the USSR were highly centralized in Moscow until its final years, despite its nominal structure as a federation of republics; the light decentralization reforms during the era of perestroika (reconstruction) and glasnost (voice-ness, as in freedom of speech) conducted by Mikhail Gorbachev as part of the Helsinki Accords are cited as one of the factors which led to the dissolution of the USSR in 1991 as result of the Cold War and the creation of the Commonwealth of Independent States.

There were two very distinct types of republics in the Soviet Union:

  • The larger union republics, representing the main ethnic groups of the Union and with the constitutional right to secede from it.
  • The smaller autonomous republics, located within some of the union republics and representing ethnic minorities. Typically, in regard to governance, autonomous republics were subordinate to the union republics they were located in.

The Karelo-Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic, a relic of the Soviet-Finnish War (the Winter War), became the only union republic to be deprived of its status in 1956. The decision to downgrade Karelia to an autonomous republic within the Russian SFSR was made unilaterally by the central government without consulting its population.[citation needed] The official basis for downgrading the status of the republic was the changes that had occurred in the national composition of its population (about 80% of the inhabitants were Russians, Belarusians and Ukrainians), as well as the need to reduce the state apparatus, the cost of maintaining which in 1955 amounted to 19.6 million rubles.[2]

Overview

Reverse of the 1-ruble note of the 1961 series, with the value in all the official languages of the Union Republics

Chapter 8 of the 1977 Soviet Constitution is titled as the "Soviet Union is a union state". Article 70 stated that the union was founded on principles "socialist federalism" as a result of free self-determination of nation and volunteer association of equal in rights soviet socialist republics. Article 71 listed all of 15 union republics that united into the Soviet Union.

According to Article 76 of the 1977 Soviet Constitution, a Union Republic was a sovereign Soviet socialist state that had united with other Soviet Republics in the USSR. Article 78 of the Constitution stated that the territory of the union republic cannot be changed without its agreement. Article 81 of the Constitution stated that "the sovereign rights of Union Republics shall be safeguarded by the USSR".[3]

In the final decades of its existence, the Soviet Union officially consisted of fifteen Soviet Socialist Republics (SSRs). All of them, with the exception of the Russian SFSR (until 1990), had their own local party chapters of the All-Union Communist Party.

In 1944, amendments to the All-Union Constitution allowed for separate branches of the Red Army for each Soviet Republic. They also allowed for Republic-level commissariats for foreign affairs and defense, allowing them to be recognized as de jure independent states in international law. This allowed for two Soviet Republics, Ukraine and Byelorussia, (as well as the USSR as a whole) to join the United Nations General Assembly as founding members in 1945.[4][5][6]

The Soviet currency Soviet ruble banknotes all included writings in national languages of all the 15 union republics.

All of the former Republics of the Union are now independent countries, with ten of them (all except the Baltic states, Georgia and Ukraine) being very loosely organized under the heading of the Commonwealth of Independent States. The Baltic states assert that their incorporation into the Soviet Union in 1940 (as the Lithuanian, Latvian, and Estonian SSRs) under the provisions of the 1939 Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact was illegal, and that they therefore remained independent countries under Soviet occupation.[7][8] Their position is supported by the European Union,[9] the European Court of Human Rights,[10] the United Nations Human Rights Council[11] and the United States.[12] In contrast, the Russian government and state officials maintain that the Soviet annexation of the Baltic states was legitimate.[13]

Constitutionally, the Soviet Union was a federation. In accordance with provisions present in its Constitution (versions adopted in 1924, 1936 and 1977), each republic retained the right to secede from the USSR. Throughout the Cold War, this right was widely considered to be meaningless; however, the corresponding Article 72 of the 1977 Constitution was used in December 1991 to effectively dissolve the Soviet Union, when Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus seceded from the Union. Although the Union was created under an initial ideological appearance of forming a supranational union, it never de facto functioned as one; an example of the ambiguity is that the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in the 1930s officially had its own foreign minister, but that office did not exercise any true sovereignty apart from that of the union. The Constitution of the Soviet Union in its various iterations defined the union as a federation with the right of the republics to secede. This constitutional status led to the possibility of the parade of sovereignties once the republic with de facto (albeit not de jure) dominance over the other republics, the Russian one, developed a prevailing political notion asserting that it would be better off if it seceded. The de facto dominance of the Russian republic is the reason that various historians (for example, Dmitri Volkogonov and others) have asserted that the union was a unitary state in fact albeit not in law.[14]: 71, 483 [15]

In practice, the USSR was a highly centralised entity from its creation in 1922 until the mid-1980s when political forces unleashed by reforms undertaken by Mikhail Gorbachev resulted in the loosening of central control and its ultimate dissolution. Under the constitution adopted in 1936 and modified along the way until October 1977, the political foundation of the Soviet Union was formed by the Soviets (Councils) of People's Deputies. These existed at all levels of the administrative hierarchy, with the former "countries" and other regions brought into the union referred to as soviets during their time as republics[16] and with the Soviet Union as a whole under the nominal control of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, located in Moscow within the Russian SFSR.

Along with the state administrative hierarchy, there existed a parallel structure of party organizations, which allowed the Politburo to exercise large amounts of control over the republics. State administrative organs took direction from the parallel party organs, and appointments of all party and state officials required approval of the central organs of the party.

Each republic had its own unique set of state symbols: a flag, a coat of arms, and, with the exception of Russia until 1990, an anthem. Every republic of the Soviet Union also was awarded with the Order of Lenin.

Union Republics of the Soviet Union

Map of the Union Republics from 1956 to 1991, as numbered by the Soviet Constitution: 1. Russia, 2. Ukraine, 3. Belarus, 4. Uzbekistan, 5. Kazakhstan, 6. Georgia, 7. Azerbaijan, 8. Lithuania, 9. Moldavia, 10. Latvia, 11. Kyrgyzstan, 12. Tajikistan, 13. Armenia, 14. Turkmenistan, 15. Estonia

The number of the union republics of the USSR varied from 4 to 16. From 1956 until its dissolution in 1991, the Soviet Union consisted of 15 Soviet Socialist Republics. (In 1956, the Karelo-Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic, created in 1940, was absorbed into the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic.) Rather than listing the republics in alphabetical order, the republics were listed in constitutional order (which roughly corresponded to their population and economic power when the republics were formed). However, particularly by the last decades of the Soviet Union, the constitutional order did not correspond to order either by population or economic power.

Emblem Name Flag Capital Official languages Established Joined Sovereignty Independence Population
(1989)
Pop.
%
Area (km2)
(1991)
Area
%
Post-Soviet and de facto states No.
Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Armenian SSR Yerevan Armenian, Russian 2 December 1920 30 December 1922 23 August 1990 21 September 1991 3,287,700 1.15 29,800 0.13  Armenia 13
Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Azerbaijan SSR Baku Azerbaijani, Russian 28 April 1920 30 December 1922 23 September 1989 18 October 1991 7,037,900 2.45 86,600 0.39  Azerbaijan
7
Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Belarusian SSR Minsk Byelorussian, Russian 31 July 1920 30 December 1922 27 July 1990 25 August 1991 10,151,806 3.54 207,600 0.93  Belarus 3
Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic[a] Flag of Estonian SSR Tallinn Estonian, Russian 21 July 1940[b] 6 August 1940 16 November 1988 8 May 1990 1,565,662 0.55 45,226 0.20  Estonia 15
Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Georgian SSR Tbilisi Georgian, Russian 25 February 1921 30 December 1922 18 November 1989 9 April 1991 5,400,841 1.88 69,700 0.31  Georgia
 Abkhazia
 South Ossetia
6
Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Kazakhstan SSR Alma-Ata Kazakh, Russian 5 December 1936 25 October 1990 16 December 1991 16,711,900 5.83 2,717,300 12.24  Kazakhstan 5
Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Kyrgyzstan SSR Frunze Kirghiz, Russian 5 December 1936 15 December 1990 31 August 1991 4,257,800 1.48 198,500 0.89  Kyrgyzstan 11
Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic[a] Flag of Latvian SSR Riga Latvian, Russian 21 July 1940[b] 5 August 1940 28 July 1989 4 May 1990 2,666,567 0.93 64,589 0.29  Latvia 10
Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic[a] Flag of Lithuanian SSR Vilnius Lithuanian, Russian 21 July 1940[b] 3 August 1940 18 May 1989 11 March 1990 3,689,779 1.29 65,200 0.29  Lithuania 8
Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Moldovan SSR Kishinev Moldavian, Russian 2 August 1940 23 June 1990 27 August 1991 4,337,600 1.51 33,843 0.15  Moldova
 Transnistria
9
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Flag of Russian SFSR Moscow Russian 7 November 1917 30 December 1922 12 June 1990 12 December 1991 147,386,000 51.40 17,075,400 76.62  Russia 1
Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Tajikistan SSR Dushanbe Tajik,
Russian
5 December 1929 24 August 1990 9 September 1991 5,112,000 1.78 143,100 0.64  Tajikistan 12
Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Turkmenistan SSR Ashkhabad Turkmen, Russian 13 May 1925 27 August 1990 27 October 1991 3,522,700 1.23 488,100 2.19  Turkmenistan 14
Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Ukrainian SSR Kiev Ukrainian, Russian 10 March 1919 30 December 1922 16 July 1990 24 August 1991 51,706,746 18.03 603,700 2.71  Ukraine 2
Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic Flag of Uzbekistan SSR Tashkent Uzbek,
Russian
5 December 1924 20 June 1990 1 September 1991 19,906,000 6.94 447,400 2.01  Uzbekistan 4

Short-lived Union Republics of the Soviet Union

Emblem Name Flag Capital Titular nationality Years of
membership
Population Area (km2) Soviet successor
Socialist Soviet Republic of Abkhaziaa Sukhumi Abkhazians 1921-1931 201,016 86,000  Abkhaz ASSR
Bukharan People's Soviet Republic Bukhara Uzbeks, Tajiks, Turkmens 1920–1924 2,000,000 182,193  Uzbek SSR
Karelo-Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic Petrozavodsk Karelians, Finns 1940–1956 651,300
(1959)
172,400  Russian SFSR
( Karelian ASSR)
Khorezm People's Soviet Republic Khiva Uzbeks, Turkmens 1920–1924 800,000 62,200  Turkmen SSR
 Uzbek SSR
Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic Tiflis Azerbaijanis, Armenians, Georgians 1922–1936 5,861,600
(1926)
186,100  Armenian SSR
 Azerbaijan SSR
 Georgian SSR

a Abkhazia's status in relation to the Georgian SSR as a "treaty republic" was never clear or well-defined, making its status as a separate republic disputed.

Republics not recognized by the Soviet Union

Emblem Name Flag Capital Official languages Independence from SSR declared Independence from USSR declared Population Area (km2) Post-Soviet states
Pridnestrovian Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic Tiraspol Russian, Ukrainian, Moldovan 2 September 1990 25 August 1991 680,000
(1989)
4,163
(1989)
 Transnistria
 Moldova

Other non-union Soviet republics

Emblem Name Flag Capital Created Defunct Successor states Modern states
Far Eastern Republic Verkhneudinsk
Chita
1920 1922  Russian SFSR  Russia
Tuvan People's Republic Kyzyl
1921 1944  Russian SFSR ( Tuvan ASSR)

The Turkestan Soviet Federative Republic was proclaimed in 1918 but did not survive to the founding of the USSR, becoming the short-lived Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic of the RSFSR. The Crimean Soviet Socialist Republic (Soviet Socialist Republic of Taurida) was also proclaimed in 1918, but did not become a union republic and was made into an autonomous republic of the RSFSR, although the Crimean Tatars had a relative majority until the 1930s or 1940s according to censuses. When the Tuvan People's Republic joined the Soviet Union in 1944, it did not become a union republic, and was instead established as an autonomous republic of the RSFSR.

The leader of the People's Republic of Bulgaria, Todor Zhivkov, suggested in the early 1960s that the country should become a union republic, but the offer was rejected.[20][21][22] During the Soviet–Afghan War, the Soviet Union proposed to annex Northern Afghanistan as its 16th union republic in what was to become the Afghan Soviet Socialist Republic.[23]

Other defunct Soviet states

Autonomous Republics of the Soviet Union

Several of the Union Republics themselves, most notably Russia, were further subdivided into Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republics (ASSRs). Though administratively part of their respective Union Republics, ASSRs were also established based on ethnic/cultural lines.

According to the constitution of the USSR, in case of a union republic voting on leaving the Soviet Union, autonomous republics, autonomous oblasts and autonomous okrugs had the right, by means of a referendum, to independently resolve whether they will stay in the USSR or leave with the seceding union republic, as well as to raise the issue of their state-legal status.[24]

Emblem Name Flag Years of
membership
Capital Official languages Area (km2) Soviet Socialist Republic Post-Soviet subjects
Abkhaz Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1931–1992 Sukhumi Abkhazian, Georgian, Russian 8,600  Georgian SSR  Abkhazia
Adjarian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1921–1990 Batumi Georgian, Russian 2,880  Georgian SSR  Adjara
Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1919–1991 Ufa Bashkir, Russian 143,600  Russian SFSR  Bashkortostan
Buryat Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1923–1990 Ulan-Ude Buryat, Russian 69,857  Russian SFSR  Buryatia
Checheno-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1936–1944
1957–1991
Grozny Chechen, Ingush, Russian 19,300  Russian SFSR  Chechnya
 Ingushetia
Chuvash Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1925–1992 Cheboksary Chuvash, Russian 18,300  Russian SFSR  Chuvashia
Dagestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1921–1991 Makhachkala Aghul, Avar, Azerbaijani, Chechen, Kumyk, Lezgian, Lak, Nogai, Tabasaran, Tat, Russian 50,300  Russian SFSR  Dagestan
Gorno-Altai Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic[note 1] 1990–1991 Gorno-Altaysk Altai, Russian[citation needed] 92,600  Russian SFSR  Altai Republic
Kabardino-Balkarian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1936–1944
1957–1991
Nalchik Kabardian, Karachay-Balkar, Russian 12,500  Russian SFSR  Kabardino-Balkaria
Kalmyk Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1935–1943
1958–1991
Elista Kalmyk Oirat, Russian 76,100  Russian SFSR  Kalmykia
Karakalpak Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1932–1991 Nukus Karakalpak (1956-1980s), Russian 165,000  Uzbek SSR  Karakalpakstan
Karelian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1923–1940
1956–1991
Petrozavodsk Finnish (1956-1980s), Russian 147,000  Russian SFSR  Karelia
Komi Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1936–1990 Syktyvkar Komi, Russian 415,900  Russian SFSR  Komi Republic
Mari Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1936–1990 Yoshkar-Ola Mari (Meadow and Hill variants), Russian 23,200  Russian SFSR  Mari El
Mordovian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1934–1990 Saransk Erzya, Moksha, Russian 26,200  Russian SFSR  Mordovia
Nakhichevan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1921–1990 Nakhichevan Azerbaijani, Russian 5,500  Azerbaijan SSR  Nakhchivan
North Ossetian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1936–1993 Ordzhonikidze Ossetian, Russian 8,000  Russian SFSR  North Ossetia
Tatar Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1920–1990 Kazan Tatar, Russian 68,000  Russian SFSR  Tatarstan
Tuvan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1961–1992 Kyzyl Tuvan, Russian 170,500  Russian SFSR  Tuva
Udmurt Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1934–1990 Izhevsk Udmurt, Russian 42,100  Russian SFSR  Udmurtia
Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic 1922–1991 Yakutsk Yakut, Russian 3,083,523  Russian SFSR  Sakha Republic

Former Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republics of the Soviet Union

Emblem Name Flag Capital Titular nationality Years of
membership
Population Area (km2) Soviet Socialist Republic Post-Soviet states
Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Simferopol Crimean Tatars
Russians
1921–1945
1991–1992
1,126,000
(1939)
26,860  Russian SFSR
 Ukrainian SSR
 Ukraine
 Russia
Kabardin Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Nalchik Kabardians 1944–1957 420,115
(1959)
12,470  Russian SFSR  Russia
Kirghiz Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic Alma-Ata Kazakhs 1920–1925 6,503,000
(1926)
2,960,000  Russian SFSR  Kazakhstan
 Uzbekistan
 Russia
Kazakh Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic 1925–1936
Kirghiz Autonomous Socialist Soviet Republic Frunze Kyrgyz 1926–1936 993,000
(1926)
196,129  Russian SFSR  Kyrgyzstan
Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Tiraspol Moldovans 1924–1940 599,150
(1939)
8,288  Ukrainian SSR  Transnistria
 Moldova
 Ukraine
Mountain Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic
Vladikavkaz Balkars, Chechens, Ingush, Kabardians, Karachays, Ossetians, Terek Cossacks 1921–1924 1,286,000
(1921)
74,000  Russian SFSR  Russia
Tajik Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Dushanbe Tajiks 1924–1929 740,000
(1924)
 Uzbek SSR  Tajikistan
Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Tashkent Uzbeks, Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, Tajiks, Turkmens 1918–1924 5,221,963
(1920)
 Russian SFSR  Kazakhstan
 Uzbekistan
 Turkmenistan
 Tajikistan
 Kyrgyzstan
Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Engels Soviet Germans 1923–1941 606,532
(1939)
27,400  Russian SFSR  Russia

Dissolution of the Soviet Union

Starting in the late 1980s, under the rule of Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet government undertook a program of political reforms (glasnost and perestroika) intended to liberalise and revitalise the Union. These measures, however, had a number of unintended political and social effects. Political liberalisation allowed the governments of the union republics to openly invoke the principles of democracy and nationalism to gain legitimacy. In addition, the loosening of political restrictions led to fractures within the Communist Party which resulted in a reduced ability to govern the Union effectively. The rise of nationalist and right-wing movements, notably led by Boris Yeltsin in Russia, in the previously homogeneous political system undermined the Union's foundations. With the central role of the Communist Party removed from the constitution, the Party lost its control over the State machinery and was banned from operating after an attempted coup d'état.

Throughout this period of turmoil, the Soviet government attempted to find a new structure that would reflect the increased authority of the republics. Some autonomous republics, like Tatarstan, Checheno-Ingushetia, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Crimea, Transnistria, Gagauzia sought the union statute in the New Union Treaty. Efforts to found a New Union Treaty, however, proved unsuccessful and the republics began to secede from the Union. By 6 September 1991, the Soviet Union's State Council recognized the independence of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania bringing the number of union republics down to 12. On 8 December 1991, the remaining leaders of the republics signed the Belavezha Accords which agreed that the USSR would be dissolved and replaced with a Commonwealth of Independent States. On 25 December, President Gorbachev announced his resignation and turned all executive powers over to Yeltsin. The next day the Council of Republics voted to dissolve the Union. Since then, the republics have been governed independently with some reconstituting themselves as liberal parliamentary republics and others, particularly in Central Asia, devolving into highly autocratic states under the leadership of the old Party elite.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c The annexation of the Baltic republics in 1940 is considered an illegal occupation by the current Baltic governments and by a number of foreign countries.[7][10][11][12][17][18][19] The Soviet Union considered the initial annexation legal, but officially recognized their independence on 6 September 1991, three months prior to its final dissolution
  2. ^ a b c Not internationally recognized, independent republic continued de jure.
  1. ^ Known as Oyrot Autonomous Oblast in 1922-1948 and Gorno-Altai Autonomous Oblast in 1948-1990.

References

  1. ^ Hough, Jerry F (1997). Democratization and revolution in the USSR, 1985-1991. Brookings Institution Press. p. 214. ISBN 0-8157-3749-1.
  2. ^ Карелия во второй половине 1940-х — в 1960-е (Karelia in the second half of 1940s - 1960s) (in Russian)
  3. ^ Federalism and the Dictatorship of Power in Russia By Mikhail Stoliarov. Taylor & Francis. 2014. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-415-30153-4. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  4. ^ "Walter Duranty Explains Changes In Soviet Constitution". Miami News. 6 February 1944. Retrieved 18 February 2014.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "League of Nations Timeline – Chronology 1944". Indiana.edu. Archived from the original on 15 June 2013. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  6. ^ "United Nations – Founding Members". Un.org. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  7. ^ a b "The Occupation of Latvia at Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Latvia". Am.gov. Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2007.
  8. ^ "Estonia says Soviet occupation justifies it staying away from Moscow celebrations". Pravda.Ru. 3 May 2005. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.
  9. ^ Motion for a resolution on the Situation in Estonia by the EU
  10. ^ a b European Court of Human Rights cases on Occupation of Baltic States
  11. ^ a b "UNITED NATIONS Human Rights Council Report". Ap.ohchr.org. Retrieved 18 February 2014.
  12. ^ a b "U.S.-Baltic Relations: Celebrating 85 Years of Friendship" (PDF). U.S. Department of State. 14 June 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2012. Retrieved 29 July 2009.
  13. ^ Russia denies Baltic 'occupation' by BBC News
  14. ^ Volkogonov, Dmitri Antonovich (1998). Autopsy for an Empire: the Seven Leaders who Built the Soviet Regime. New York: Free Press/Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9780684834207.
  15. ^ Butler, William E.; Kahn, Jeffrey (May 2002). "Federalism or Federationism. A book review of: Federalism, Democratization and the Rule of Law in Russia by Jeffrey Kahn". Michigan Law Review. 100 (6): 1444–1452. doi:10.2307/1290449. JSTOR 1290449.
  16. ^ Black, Jeremy; Brewer, Paul; Shaw, Anthony; Chandler, Malcolm; Cheshire, Gerard; Cranfield, Ingrid; Ralph Lewis, Brenda; Sutherland, Joe; Vint, Robert (2003). World History. Bath, Somerset: Parragon Books. p. 343. ISBN 0-75258-227-5.
  17. ^ European parliament: Resolution on the situation in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania (No C 42/78) (1983). Official Journal of the European Communities. European Parliament.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ Aust, Anthony (2005). Handbook of International Law. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53034-7.
  19. ^ Ziemele, Ineta (2005). State Continuity and Nationality: The Baltic States and Russia. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 90-04-14295-9.
  20. ^ Elster, Jon (1996). The roundtable talks and the breakdown of communism. University of Chicago Press. p. 179. ISBN 0-226-20628-9.
  21. ^ Held, Joseph (1994). Dictionary of East European history since 1945. Greenwood Press. p. 84. ISBN 0-313-26519-4.
  22. ^ Gökay, Bülent (2001). Eastern Europe since 1970. Longman. p. 19. ISBN 0-582-32858-6.
  23. ^ Soviets may be poised to annex the Afghan North - Chicago Tribune. 19 August 1984. Retrieved on 10 December 2016. "Miraki said then-Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev urged Afghan President Babrak Karmal to win Afghan Communist Party approval for Moscow's annexation of eight northern provinces and their formation into the 16th Soviet republic, the Socialist Republic of Afghanistan. The defector said Brezhnev envisioned the southern half of the country as a powerless, Pa-than-speaking buffer with U.S.-backed Pakistan."
  24. ^ "СОЮЗ СОВЕТСКИХ СОЦИАЛИСТИЧЕСКИХ РЕСПУБЛИК. ЗАКОН О порядке решения вопросов, связанных с выходом союзной республики из СССР" (in Russian). Archived from the original on 12 September 2016. Retrieved 13 June 2022.

Further reading