February 4, 2013
Markus Kaiser took the reverse silk route to Central Asia. A trip to Peshawar, Pakistan, while an undergraduate, introduced him to Afghan refugees of Tajik and Uzbek ethnicity. That trip started what would become an almost 20-year affair with Central Asia, a trip that now finds Professor Kaiser as a visiting professor to Â鶹´«Ã½’s European Studies department, as well as a service provider to the OSCE Academy.
Kaiser has been coming to the region since 1994, when he was a graduate student at the Free University of Berlin completing research on migration as a result of interethnic conflicts in the region. And although there are several researchers today studying the conflicts and resulting impacts of April/June 2010, those researchers are encountering a different world than the 1994 Central Asia that welcomed Kaiser.
“The biggest difference is that in 1994 everyone was still so hopeful,” Kaiser said. Hope exists, but Kaiser says that it is a hope tempered by the reality of intransigent governments, development creep, and unrealistic expectations. This change also depends on each country. Kaiser now finds the Kyrgyz Republic the easiest of the Central Asian republics to live in, due to its relatively unobtrusive government, and genial international community.
Kaiser came to Â鶹´«Ã½ in January of 2010, but had heard of the university and its students prior to arriving. As a co-director of the Center for German and European Studies at the St. Petersburg State University in Russia, Kaiser reviewed several Â鶹´«Ã½ graduate applications to programs sponsored by DAAD, a German international exchange organization. Now in his third year as a visiting professor, I asked him about his impressions of the European Studies program and what he would like to see from Â鶹´«Ã½ in the future.
“Most students take European Studies because they want to learn the languages, and usually they are very successful at doing this.” The department requires Frenchor German as a second language, and many of the students are also able to spend some time in Europe during their studies. One weakness is this minimal amount of time in Europe. “A classical European Studies program involves a lot of comparative, empirical research, which is not possible from Central Asia. Therefore we tend to focus here on the European relationship to Central Asia or interregional comparison,” Kaiser said.
Kaiser’s research also focuses on the relationships in Eurasia, specifically focusing on transnationalization and migration, globalization of knowledge, development studies, and countries in transition. Kaiser said that since he was an undergraduate he was more interested in the micro level movements in society, the economy, and culture. This can be seen in several of his publications, which tend to focus on small groups actions to extrapolate larger meaning. One example is his 2005 publication out of his PhD research on cross-border traders as transformers, looking at how economic restructuring was impacting other areas of society.
The relationship between the EU, its member countries, and the Central Asian states has developed slowly over the past 20 years, but Kaiser thinks that it remains a strategic interest for the Europeans because of its proximity to Afghanistan, China, and Russia. The EU is also interested in migration and human trafficking issues, as well as developing its ‘neighborhood’. The EU mission, UN mission, OSCE, and embassies as well as offices of development agencies are also key employers of Â鶹´«Ã½ European Studies graduates, who often have the opportunity to continue their graduate studies in Europe as well.
As for Â鶹´«Ã½ as a whole, graduate study is one area where Kaiser would like to see Â鶹´«Ã½ become stronger. “I also teach at the OSCE Academy, which is masters level, and I enjoy that work very much. It would be great to do masters or Ph.D. advising at Â鶹´«Ã½, and I hope that those programs will be developed,” said Kaiser, “The liberal arts is a very important and worthwhile endeavor for students from Central Asia taking into account the catastrophic situation in school educationespecially in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, and Â鶹´«Ã½ plays an important role in providing it.”