Martha Brill Olcott

Senior Associate
Russia and Eurasia Program and
Co-director
al-Farabi Carnegie Program on Central Asia
Olcott is professor emerita at Colgate University, having taught political science there from 1974 to 2002. Prior to her work at the endowment, Olcott served as a special consultant to former secretary of state Lawrence Eagleburger.
 

Education

PhD, MA, University of Chicago
BA, SUNY Buffalo 

Languages

English; French; Russian; Turkish

Contact Information

 

Martha Brill Olcott is a senior associate with the Russia and Eurasia Program at the Carnegie Endowment in Washington, DC.

Olcott specializes in the problems of transitions in Central Asia and the Caucasus as well as the security challenges in the Caspian region more generally. She has followed interethnic relations in Russia and the states of the former Soviet Union for more than twenty-five years and has traveled extensively in these countries and in South Asia. Her book, Central Asia’s Second Chance, examines the economic and political development of this ethnically diverse and strategically vital region in the context of the changing security threats post-9/11.

In addition to her work in Washington, Olcott co-directs the Carnegie Moscow Center Project on Religion, Society, and Security in the former Soviet Union and the al-Farabi Carnegie Program on Central Asia in Almaty, Kazakhstan. She is professor emerita at Colgate University, having taught political science there from 1974 to 2002. 

Olcott served for five years as a director of the Central Asian American Enterprise Fund. Prior to her work at the Carnegie Endowment, she served as a special consultant to former secretary of state Lawrence Eagleburger.

Soon after 9/11, she was selected by Washingtonian magazine for its list of “71 People the President Should Listen To” about the war on terrorism. 

Olcott is the author of Tajikistan’s Difficult Development Path (Carnegie Endowment, 2012); In the Whirlwind of Jihad (Carnegie Endowment, 2012); Central Asia’s Second Chance (Carnegie Endowment, 2005); Kazakhstan: Unfulfilled Promise (Carnegie Endowment, 2002); Preventing New Afghanistans: A Regional Strategy for Reconstruction (Carnegie Endowment Policy Brief 11, 2001) Getting It Wrong: Regional Cooperation and the Commonwealth of Independent States, with Anders Åslund and Sherman Garnett (Carnegie Endowment, 1999); and Russia After Communism edited with Anders Åslund (Carnegie Endowment, 1999).

  • Other Publications Remarks given at conference on “Famine in Kazakhstan June 14, 2012 Русский
    Challenges in Studying Collectivization and the Famine

    The study of the Soviet drive toward collectivization in Kazakhstan and the resulting famine comes with a particular set of challenges.

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  • Kazakhstan Parliament
    Article January 27, 2012
    Kazakhstan’s Political (r)evolution

    Recent violence in Zhanaozen in December has forced Kazakhstan's authorities to rethink political, economic, and social policies. Only time will tell if the changes will have their desired effect, but it is the country's population that will make the ultimate judgment.

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  • Central Asia and the 'Stans
    Op-Ed Real Instituto Elcano December 28, 2011
    The "Stans" at 20

    Twenty years after the Soviet collapse, leaders of the five Central Asian republics have built functioning states but they have yet to fully implement democratic reforms, decentralize and share power, and develop strong intraregional relations.

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  • Kazakhstan at 20
    Op-Ed Diplomatic Courier December 20, 2011
    Kazakhstan at 20

    Twenty years after its independence from the Soviet Union, Kazakhstan has made a smooth transition to a middle income country and advanced a foreign policy that could make it a vital bridge between Europe and Asia.

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  • Kazakhstan at 20
    Article December 12, 2011
    Kazakhstan at 20

    As Kazakhstan celebrates its twentieth anniversary of independence, the country faces a number of tough geopolitical, political, economic, and social challenges.

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  • Op-Ed Center of Asia November 30, 2011 Русский
    Kazakhstan's Soviet Legacy

    Legacies of the Soviet era still pervade Kazakhstan, 20 years after independence, and leave most citizens unable to offer a detached judgment of what benefits Kazakhstan might have derived from seven decades of Soviet rule.

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  • Ten Years After 9/11—A World of Change
    Other Publications September 8, 2011
    Ten Years After 9/11—A World of Change

    One year after 9/11, seventeen Carnegie experts assessed the significance of the attacks and their aftermath. Ten years after 9/11, the same Carnegie experts revisit their original findings and analyze the impact of the historic moment.

  •  
  • Testimony June 22 June 22, 2011
    Addressing Ethnic Tension in Kyrgyzstan

    The international community should focus on pressing the Kyrgyz government to respect the basic human rights of all their citizens and emphasize the importance of equality and accountability before the law.

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  • Martha Brill Olcott
    Testimony OSCE Seminar October 12, 2010
    Kyrgyzstan: Perspectives and Implications For the Region

    Last June's ethnic violence in Kyrgyzstan, along with the performance of the country's new parliamentary system of government, will have wide-ranging implications for Central Asia and for regional security.

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  • Martha Brill Olcott
    Testimony U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe July 27, 2010
    Instability in Kyrgyzstan: The International Response

    The international community can help bring much-needed stability to Kyrgyzstan, which has experienced violent ethnic clashes as its leaders lay the groundwork for Central Asia’s first genuine parliamentary democracy.

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  • Washington October 15, 2012
    Tajikistan's Difficult Development Path

    The Tajik leadership faces an urgent choice between fully embracing reform and continuing on its current failed track. Tajikistan’s decision will have very real implications for this troubled region.

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  • In the Whirlwind of Jihad cover
    Washington July 17, 2012
    In the Whirlwind of Jihad

    In Uzbekistan, Central Asia’s most populous country, Islam has been an ever-present factor in the lives of its people and a contentious force for political officials trying to build a secular government.

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  • Revised Edition June 1, 2010
    Kazakhstan: Unfulfilled Promise? (Revised Edition)

    Olcott draws on her vast knowledge of Kazakhstan to provide an important contribution to understanding the current status of this country, as well as the perils of state building and the dangers these pose for regional and global security.

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  • Washington August 10, 2005
    Central Asia’s Second Chance

    Early hopes for a democratic transition in Central Asia after the fall of the Soviet Union were dashed, but new hope was raised as the global community re-engaged with Central Asia in the wake of 9/11. Martha Brill Olcott explains how the region squandered its "second chance," and what might happen next.

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  • Washington February 15, 2002 Washington, D.C.
    Kazakhstan: Unfulfilled Promise

    At the outset of independence 10 years ago, it appeared that democracy was beginning to take hold in Kazakhstan. A decade later, economic reform is mired in widespread corruption and a regime that flirted with democracy is now laying the foundation for family-based, authoritarian rule.

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  • Washington January 1, 2000 Washington, D.C.
    Rapprochement or Rivalry? Russia-China Relations in a Changing Asia

    U.S., Russian, and Chinese scholars analyze the most important issues posed by the relationship between China and Russia, and weigh the prospects for real cooperation between Russia, a severely weakened power, and China, a power on the rise.

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  • Washington January 1, 1999
    Getting It Wrong: Regional Cooperation and the Commonwealth of Independent States

    Written by three of the West's leading experts on the former Soviet Union, this book offers a comprehensive assessment of how and why the Commonwealth of Independent States has failed.

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  • Washington January 1, 1999
    Russia After Communism

    This book features chapters written by pairs of leading Russian and American scholars, and provides an overall assessment of what has been accomplished and what has failed since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

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  • NPR April 9, 2010
    Kyrgyzstan: A Primer

    Public hostility toward the Kyrgyz government escalated over the past weeks, leading to the recent street protests and demonstrations that seem to have topped the government of President Bakiyev.

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  • Martha Brill Olcott
    NPR's Morning Edition February 9, 2009
    U.S. Examining Options to Central Asian Air Bases

    In the wake of Kyrgyzstan’s decision to close its American airbase the U.S. must find a Central Asian location for its logistical operations outside of Afghanistan to ensure they remain uninterrupted in case the war deteriorates further.

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  • Marketplace May 6, 2008
    Medvedev takes over, but Putin's close

    Carnegie's Martha Brill Olcott spoke with host Bob Moon about Vladimir Putin's legacy, the Russian economy, and the course Putin's successor Dmitry Medvedev might take.

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  • The Newshour with Jim Lehrer July 3, 2007
    Presidents Bush, Putin Agree on Iran, Not on Missile Shield
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Source: http://carnegieendowment.org/experts/index.cfm?fa=expert_view&expert_id=23

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