Abstract
<jats:p>This article examines the distinctive features of national identity formation in the Republic of Kazakhstan through the lens of comprehensive political science analysis. The study analyzes the complex interaction between ethnic diversity, historical legacy, state-building processes, and modernization efforts that shape contemporary Kazakhstani identity in a country uniting more than 130 ethnic groups. Drawing on the theoretical foundations of nation-building, including models of civic and ethnic nationalism, as well as empirical observations of post-Soviet transformation covering three decades of independence, the study identifies key mechanisms through which Kazakhstan implemented national consolidation while maintaining its multinational character. The work argues that Kazakhstan represents a distinctive case of a balanced approach to nation-building, where the state strategically coordinated the promotion of Kazakh ethnic identity through language policy, reconstruction of historical narrative, and demographic changes, while simultaneously supporting the principles of civic equality and institutional mechanisms of minority representation. The analysis demonstrates that this approach, illustrated by the constitutional distinction between Kazakh ethnic and Kazakhstani civic identity, contributed to relative stability and allowed the avoidance of ethnic conflicts that affected other post-Soviet states. The research findings indicate that Kazakhstani national identity represents a synthesis of civic and ethnic dimensions, characterized by strategic state policies within institutional structures that are oriented toward gradual national consolidation with observance of the principles of civic equality.</jats:p>