Kamalov has authored more than and several significant monographs:
: Provides a detailed reading of the inscription to date an Oghuz tribe uprising to 749 AD.
He remains the architect of Kazakhstan’s financial immune system—painful, controversial, and utterly indispensable.
One thing is certain: the name "Kamalov" seems to be of Eastern European or Russian origin, sparking rumors about potential connections to countries like Russia or Ukraine. However, without concrete evidence, it is impossible to confirm these speculations.
: At Turan University, Dr. Kamalov leads the Center for Regional Studies , overseeing international conferences exploring minority histories, migration patterns, and Eurasian geopolitical dynamics. Core Research Areas and Contributions
Mapping Central Eurasian History: The Academic Legacy of Ablet Kamalov
: Explains the practice of baliliq (adoption) and how contracts were framed as charitable debts to comply with Islamic law while navigating economic hardship.
1. Navigating Identity: From 'Sovietness' to 'Kazakhstanness'
SOVIET ERA POST-SOVIET ERA [Transnational/Border Identity] ───> [Bifurcated Homeland Concept] ├── Civic Homeland: Kazakhstan └── Historical Homeland: Xinjiang
Ablet Kurbanovich Kamalov (born 1968) is a Kazakh economist, financier, and former statesman. He rose to prominence in the early 2000s as a Deputy Chairman of the National Bank of Kazakhstan. However, his true influence exploded during Kazakhstan’s most severe economic crisis of the 21st century: the 2014–2016 oil price crash and the subsequent abandonment of the tenge’s currency corridor.
(2001): A seminal work republished in Farsi in 2002. Turks and Iranians in the Tang Empire (2017).
Dr. Kamalov holds a Doctorate in Historical Sciences and has achieved significant international recognition within his field. His leadership roles include:
(2012).
Professor Kamalov further solidified his expertise by completing a Doctoral program at the Institute of Oriental Studies in Almaty, Kazakhstan. On November 28, 2008, he defended his Habilitation (Doctor of Science in History) thesis on the theme "Turks and Iranian peoples in the T'ang Empire (618-907)," marking the culmination of his rigorous academic training.
In a world where critical infrastructure is increasingly a battleground (from cyber-attacks to physical sabotage), Kamalov’s methods are being studied by NATO and CSTO engineers alike. He proved that a legacy Soviet grid could be retrofitted to survive a total separation in under 72 hours.