670929307bf35.pdf
DOI:
Mavjud emas
4. Khalid, A. (2011). Central Asia: A Global Studies Handbook. Global Studies Press.
7. Rakhmatulina, D. (2015). The Social Dimensions of Cotton Production in the Fergana Valley: Labor, Land, and Livelihoods. Eurasian Geography and Economics, 56(4), 493-511.
8. Zehra, S. (2012). Cotton, Colonialism, and the Environment: The Case of the Fergana Valley. Environmental History, 17(2), 234-256.
9. Abdullaev, I. (2014). Economic Changes in Central Asia: The Role of Cotton Production in the Fergana Valley. Journal of Economic Policy Research, 10(2), 99-116.
10. Tadjibaeva, D. (2013). Cultural Implications of Cotton Cultivation in the Fergana Valley: Tradition Meets Modernity. Central Asian Cultural Studies, 2(1), 78-92.
5. Wheeler, J. (2009). The Politics of Cotton: Imperialism and the Cotton Economy in Central Asia. Central Asian Studies Review, 4(3), 231-250.
6. Harris, R. (2006). Water Management and Cotton Cultivation in the Fergana Valley: Historical Developments and Contemporary Challenges. Water International, 31(3), 371-385.
1. Hoffman, B. (2007). The Cotton Industry in Central Asia: The Economic and Social Impact of Cotton Production in the Fergana Valley. Central Asian Survey, 26(2), 189-206.
2. Meyer, E. (2010). Rural Change and the Cotton Economy in the Fergana Valley: A Historical Perspective. Journal of Central Asian Studies, 15(1), 45-67.
3. Sullivan, J. (2008). Colonial Agriculture and the Transformation of the Fergana Valley: Cotton and Its Consequences. In Agriculture and State in Central Asia (pp. 123-145). Cambridge University Press.