Abstract

‘Youth’ is an ambivalent concept that is situationally and emically specific. This article discusses socio-demographic approaches to youth and applies the ‘youth bulge’ argument – which claims that a society with a high percentage of youth has an increased risk for violent conflicts – to the Central Asian context, more precisely to the early Komsomol and the former combatants in civil war Tajikistan. Based on ethnographic material, I analyse vanguard groups and their strategies for manipulating, challenging and negotiating cultural concepts of youth to mobilize young people on a large scale.

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