Academic literature on the topic 'Russia (Federation) – History – Philosophy'

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Journal articles on the topic "Russia (Federation) – History – Philosophy"

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Oversloot, Hans. "The Merger of Federal Subjects of the Russian Federation During Putin's Presidency and After." Review of Central and East European Law 34, no. 2 (2009): 119–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157303509x406278.

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AbstractAmong the institutional changes brought about or instigated during Vladimir Putin's two terms in office as President of the Russian Federation (RF), the reduction of the number of federal subjects of the RF—i.e., the number of territorial–administrative 'entities' that together constitute the Russian Federation—has perhaps attracted the least attention. However, this policy of reducing the number of subjects by bringing about what is effectively a merger of two or three subjects, thereby creating new federal subjects, is worthy of attention for a number of reasons. This policy is one of the ways in which the Federation's center (re)asserts its dominant position vis-à-vis the 'constitutive parts' of the Federation, which are, indeed, treated as 'subjects' within a more unitary state format. This policy runs counter to what appears to be a trend in many other countries where 'native peoples' (or 'indigenous peoples') are accorded various forms of self rule, often within their 'home territories' ('self-government rights').This article will address the procedures being followed to bring about the reduction of the number of subjects, as well as the reasons for merging smaller subjects, in terms of the number of inhabitants, with larger ones. The possible future of the policy of subject merger will be discussed in the final part of the article. It will be argued that the reduction of the number of subjects of the Russian Federation to merely a few dozen will entail the end of Russia as a federation; by doing so, Russia will reconstitute itself as a unitary state.
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Henderson, Jane, and Marina Lomovtseva. "Constitutional Justice in Russia." Review of Central and East European Law 34, no. 1 (2009): 37–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157303509x406223.

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AbstractThe 1993 Russian Constitution and 1994 Federal Constitutional Law “On the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation” define the jurisdiction and activity of the Federal Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation. However, these pieces of legislation do not comprehensively address all the issues, and there has been some broadening of the Court's power through interpretation and the effect of some other legislation. This article examines the Court's jurisdiction and some of the issues that arise in the exercise thereof, as well as the relative role of the constitutional or charter courts of the subjects of the Federation, and the relationship between the Constitutional Court and the other courts in the Russian federal system. Issues of the methods of constitutional interpretation are addressed. The importance of the Constitutional Court as the federal agency of constitutional court supervision (review) in ensuring the effective application of the Russian Constitution is highlighted in the context of this growth of a comparatively new branch of law in the Russian legal system.
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Medvedev, Andrey. "Conditional (Contingent) Fees in the Russian Federation." Review of Central and East European Law 33, no. 2 (2008): 205–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/092598808x262605.

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AbstractIn this article, the author discusses contemporary Russian judicial practice concerning the legality of attorney's conditional fees. He starts with a brief overview of foreign practice and distinguishes various kinds of conditional fees. The author provides a classification of conditional fees, through the prism of which he evaluates judicial practice in Russia. He distinguishes and, in particular, contrasts the contingent (or contingency) fee from (with) the conditional fee per se (the conditional fee in the narrow sense). The main focus is on a landmark 2007 Decision of the RF Constitutional Court in which the Court ruled against conditional fees in Russia. The author provides a detailed analysis of the Decision. He supports a view which is in clear opposition to the Constitutional Court, finding the Decision facile, criticizing its motivation and questioning its feasibility. The author describes the claims submitted to the Court, the findings of the Court, and the conclusions reached by the Court. Furthermore, he considers the impact which the Decision may have on judicial practice. The author concludes by discussing the possible future of conditional fees in the Russian Federation and notes that the Decision of the RF Constitutional Court may not constitute the final word on the issue. He advocates further and more in-depth research on the nature of conditional fees.
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Venäläinen, Marina. "Russia Adapts the Model of the Finnish Legal Aid System." Review of Central and East European Law 33, no. 1 (2008): 135–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/092598808x262551.

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AbstractIn this article, the author discusses the recent experiences of cooperation between the Ministry of Justice of Finland and the Ministry of Justice of the Russian Federation and the Federal Registry Service regarding the development of a free state legal aid system in Russia. These experiences stem from a pilot project initiated and implemented by the Ministry of Justice in the Russian Federation and associated with the Ministry of Justice of Finland during 2006-2007. The article first addresses the key laws within the Russian legislative system concerning legal aid that had been enacted prior to and during the pilot project, and presents the authorities that are responsible for the provision of legal aid services in Russia. Secondly, it presents some preliminary descriptive results obtained by the year 2006 on the socio-demographic profile of users of the legal aid system that was established for piloting in Russia and on the legal cases addressed during the project. The examples provided in the article are particularly based on the statistics of the State Bureau of Legal Aid of the Republic of Karelia—one of the pilot regions. The article also discusses the experiences of the Finnish experts who were involved in the project and addresses some of the specific problems that were noticed during the pilot work in the Russian legal aid system. The author concludes by identifying a number of subjects that need specific attention and practical implementation, in order to further develop the system of free state-provisioned legal aid in Russia.
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Pimonov, V. A. "To the 25th anniversary of the Constitution of the Russian Federation." Psychology and Law 8, no. 4 (2018): 1–3. http://dx.doi.org/10.17759/psylaw.2018080401.

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In December 2018, the country celebrates the 25th anniversary of the Russian Constitution. The current (fifth) Constitution of Russia was adopted for the first time in the history of Russian constitutionalism by popular vote. Now there are many critics of the current Basic law of Russia, claiming its illegitimacy (citing as evidence the argument that the Constitution did not vote for almost half of the population) and even the anti-people character, citing the fact that eliminated the system of Councils, including the Congress of people's deputies. At the same time, opponents do not take into account that they can now freely criticize the current Basic law of the state without fear of repression. The Constitution of the Russian Federation fixed an important norm according to which the person, his rights and freedoms are the highest value (Art. 2). Chapter 2 of the Basic law is devoted entirely to the personal, political, socio-economic rights and freedoms of the individual. One of the main advantages of the Constitution of the Russian Federation is that both advanced ideas of liberal social and legal philosophy and communitarianism are woven into its text.
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Ruutu, Katja. "Future, Past and Present in Russian Constitutional Politics: Russian Constitutions in a Conceptual-Historical Perspective." Review of Central and East European Law 35, no. 1 (2010): 77–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157303510x12650378240034.

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AbstractThe present article uses the methods of conceptual history to investigate the transformation of Soviet and Russian constitutional concepts. My intention is to show the whole constitutional movement of Russia, and to focus on the 'time layers' (future, past and present) used by actors in constructing the key concepts that inform the narratives of the constitutional unity of the Soviet Union/Russian Federation. By focusing on the six constitutions adopted in the Soviet Union/Russian Federation, the article will seek to show that Soviet/Russian conceptual history is more multifaceted, and more political in nature, than is commonly thought. Because the political unity of the state was restricted not only by the constitution, but also by the party ideology of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, political debates concerning constitutional concepts represented the key discussions for all the reformative pursuits of Soviet politics. Constitutional concepts were the most important means to argue and create a basis for a new political presentation and new political programs. This pattern has also been typical of present-day Russian politics, with the difference that, so far, only one constitution has been adopted in the Russian Federation. Specifically, we will seek to relate Putin's constitutional concepts to the textual base, and the political background, of the previous constitutions. On a more general level, the present article should contribute to the development of a theory of periodization that takes into consideration the shifts in a period's key concepts and vocabularies.
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Preclik, Petr. "Culture Re-introduced: Contestation of Human Rights in Contemporary Russia." Review of Central and East European Law 37, no. 2-3 (2012): 173–230. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/092598812x13274154886782.

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AbstractThis article explores the current human-rights discourse in the Russian Federation through its relationship with the Council of Europe, the strongest human-rights regime that Russia has signed up for. Against the background of current international-relations theories, the article argues that human-rights scholarship should re-introduce the concept of culture into its research designs in order to be able to explain the interaction between cultural groupings and globally dominant discourses, such as human rights. The article further argues that human rights ought to be conceptualized as symbolic technologies and studied as discursive variables that enter the cycle of national-identity formation. To that end, I use the contestation thesis proposed by Andrei Tsygankov. The article concludes that Russia is currently actively securing itself against the dominant and universal human-rights discourse, which is perceived as hindering independent societal development in Russia. This state of securization is illustrated in the current debates within PACE on topics connected with human rights and Russia.
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Oversloot, Hans. "Reordering the State (without Changing the Constitution): Russia under Putin's Rule, 2000-2008." Review of Central and East European Law 32, no. 1 (2007): 41–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/092598807x165569.

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AbstractIn the present article, it is assumed that V.V. Putin will not have the 1993 Constitution of the Russian Federation changed in order to help him arrange for a prolonged stay as President of Russia after his second term expires in 2008. It is also assumed that there will be no constitutional changes as to the power and the position of the prime-minister which would allow for an immediate 'return' of V.V. Putin in another capacity, namely as prime-minister, with much the same powers as he presently holds as President. The author expects that Putin will be true to his word in that he will maintain the 1993 Constitution (with the exception of minor change), that he will show to be—to use the Russian constitutional terminology—the garant of this Constitution.Nevertheless, within the framework of the 1993 Constitution, substantial changes have been made in the ordering of the Russian state, by federal law, by other means. The subordination of the subjects of the Russian Federation to the federal center, the 'emancipation' of state-politics from party politics, the 'emancipation' of democracy itself from party-politics, the penetration of societal organizations by state institutions (upravliaemaia demokratiia or suverennaia demokratiia), and the accompanying (state-) ideological changes, which have come about especially during Putin's second term, all add up to what is expected to be a lasting legacy. Putin has not changed the 1993 Constitution; he has given it its definite reading (interpretation) as it were.
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DREMOVA, Katerina. "Conciliatory Justice in Modern Russia." Journal of Advanced Research in Law and Economics 11, no. 1 (March 31, 2020): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.14505//jarle.v11.1(47).03.

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The research studies conciliatory justice in modern Russia. Its formation and peculiarities in the institution of alternative ways of resolving legal conflict on the example of mediation are considered. Various views regarding the mediation definition are analyzed, and the author's vision of this category concept is given. The origins of mediation history abroad and in Russia are studied. The essence and peculiarities of mediation application as an alternative method of economic disputes settlement are characterized. The benefits of using conciliatory procedures in a business environment are revealed. The main aspects of the procedural legislation reform initiated by the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation concerning the change in the legal regulation of conciliatory procedures application in the settlement of legal conflicts are outlined. It is noted that the beginning of procedural reform in Russia with regard to dispute settlement through conciliatory procedures was triggered by the resolution of the plenum of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation ‘On submission to the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of Russian Federation a federal law draft ‘On amendments to a number of legislative acts of the Russian Federation in connection with conciliatory procedure improvements’ adopted on 18 January 2018 and the resolution of the Government of the Russian Federation. Statistics on the ratio of dismissals agreed, dispute settlement through the mediation procedure, as well as plaintiff-triggered dismissals are provided. Methodology: the study is carried out on the basis of the universal method on scientific study of the social development principles –dialectical materialism provisions, as well as general and specific scientific methods: dogmatic, regulatory legal, legal comparative, fragmented historical and legal, case studies (statistical data and judicial statistics analysis), logical (hypotheses, analogy, modeling, analysis and synthesis methods), philosophic (axiological, derivation methods on the basis of priori and axiomatic provisions), generalization and abstraction methods. Conclusions: To date, entrepreneurs are increasingly using conciliatory procedures when settling disputes. This way of dispute settlement becomes very convenient, businessmen are not in the need to spend their time on litigation, often protracted, but can settle issues more quickly and effectively. Today, conciliatory justice in the Russian Federation is going through the stage of formation and development and in the future is to become a demanded institution of judicial law.
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Świder, Konrad. "Russian Neo-Eurasian Geopolitics as a Total Ideology on the Example of Aleksandr Dugin’s Concept." Civitas. Studia z filozofii polityki 25 (December 30, 2019): 61–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.35757/civ.2019.25.04.

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The purpose of this article is to outline the geopolitical concepts of Aleksandr Dugin, the guru of Russian Eurasian geopolitics as a total ideology. After the collapse of the USSR, there was a rapid renaissance of geopolitics in Russia, which was an ideological attempt to rationalise the role and place of the post-Soviet Russian state in the post-Cold War international system. The dynamic development of geopolitics in Russia was also a way for the Russians to overcome the post-imperial trauma and the post-Soviet identity crisis. Geopolitics was to define the global aspirations and goals of the Russian Federation, being the quintessence of postmodern Russian messianism and setting a new historical mission for this state. One of several geopolitical trends in Russia was neo-Eurasianism, whose main ideologist was Aleksandr Dugin. The Russian geopolitician has proceeded to formulate a total ideology based on geopolitics for Russia, which is to constitute an intellectually and conceptually attractive synthesis of all the universalist ideologies practised in this country throughout history. Dugin tries to integrate geopolitics with the metaphysics and philosophy of being, transforming it into a kind of ideocratic sacrum and ideological signpost for the contemporary Russian state.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Russia (Federation) – History – Philosophy"

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Urs, Ion Social Sciences &amp International Studies Faculty of Arts &amp Social Sciences UNSW. "The empowerment of aggressive state ideology in two periods of Russian history." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. Social Sciences & International Studies, 2007. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/40568.

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The concepts of power and state - particularly embedded in the idea of the Great Power, with a geopolitical perspective and a profoundly aggressive character - are tantamount in importance to the Russia's elite political ideology. However, the existence of different emphases within such a political ideology, ranging from the active-obstructive to the passive stances, brings into question the factors of variation that might be responsible for the elite's level of determination to pursue these concepts over an internal or foreign policy development. In addressing this query, two tasks are set: descriptive - involving a survey of the content of Russian aggressive political ideology over different periods in history; and explanatory - determining circumstances that might account for the empowerment of one or other option of Russian aggressive political ideology. Therefore, the thesis includes a comparison of historical periods with similar relevance to the Russian state. The concern here is in relation to shifting factors of variations of aggressive political ideology acting in the space-frame of one state, but in different time-frame. Resting on these frames the thesis explores the shaping of the Russian elite's defining principles of state internal and foreign policy development and traces the factors of variation responsible for the empowerment of one or other particular form of the aggressive political ideology. The factors of variation discussed in the thesis are different in nature and intensity. The primary impetus for variation in the form that aggressive political ideology would take is determined by the factor of national distress. Other factors (regime volatility, political and economic motivations, information dissemination, and challenges within the international system) are responsible for the depth and extent to which aggressive ideology is going to resonate. No factor could create the variation by itself. The argument is that a specific set of factors is required to create the conditions for variations in the form the aggressive political ideology would take and to determine whether aggressive ideology would generate or not an obstructive political decision.
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Reynolds, Natasha. "The mid Upper Palaeolithic of European Russia : chronology, culture history and context : a study of five Gravettian backed lithic assemblages." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:f9a56097-50b9-427d-8276-3acc191c834c.

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This thesis examines the Mid Upper Palaeolithic (MUP) of Russia (ca. 30,000-20,000 14C BP). During this time, as in the rest of Europe, the principal archaeological industry is known as the Gravettian. However, in Russia two other industries, the Streletskayan and the Gorodtsovian, are also known from the beginning of the MUP. Historically, there have been significant problems integrating the Russian MUP record with that from the rest of Europe. The research described in this thesis concentrates on backed lithic assemblages (including Gravette points, microgravettes, other backed points and backed bladelets) from five Russian Gravettian sites: Kostenki 8 Layer 2, Kostenki 4, Kostenki 9, Khotylevo 2 and Kostenki 21 Layer 3. These are studied from an explicitly Western European theoretical perspective, using standard techno-typological methods to construct typological groupings and describe the variation between and within sites. Alongside this, new radiocarbon dates from several sites Kostenki 8 Layer 2, Kostenki 4 and Borshchevo 5) were obtained. These radiocarbon dates are critically analysed alongside published dates and unpublished dates made available to this research. The results of the research constitute a new culture history for the Russian MUP. Each stage of the MUP is dated and described, and the uncertainties in our knowledge outlined. One new lithic index fossil is defined and two others are re-assessed. The Russian record is compared with the contemporary archaeological record elsewhere in Europe, in order to describe large-scale synchronic variation and changes through time in the homogeneity and regionalisation of material culture. The relationship between these dynamics and climate change are discussed.
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Victoir, Laura A. "Moscow-area estates : a case study of twentieth-century architectural preservation and cultural politics." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.670078.

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Pasholok, Maria. "Imaginary interiors : representing domestic spaces in 1910s and 1920s Russian film and literature." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2015. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:c9d47ca1-6164-48fb-99f1-67ef37c77c4a.

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This thesis is an exploration of the ways in which a number of important Russian writers and filmmakers of the 1910s and 1920s appropriated domestic interiors as structural, visual and literary metaphors. My focus is on the artistic articulation of the closed space of the Russian domestic interior, in particular as it surfaced in the narratives of the modernist literature and cinema of the time and became an essential metaphor of its age. In my discussion I take issue with two standard ways of understanding domestic space in existing literature. I argue that representations of home spaces in early twentiethcentury Russian culture mount a challenge to the conventional view of the home as a place of safety and stability. I also argue that, at this point, the traditional approach to the room and the domestic space as a fixed closed structure is assailed by representations that see domestic space as kinetic. The importance of the 'room in motion' means that I address cinematic as well as literary representations of domestic space, and show that even literary representation borrow cinematic techniques. My different chapters constitute case studies of various separate, but complementary, aspects of the representation of home space. The first chapter shows how domestic space in reflected in the poetical language of Anna Akhmatova. The second chapter focuses on the parallel exploration of rooms and a child's consciousness in Kotik Letaev by Andrei Belyi. The third chapter discovers the philosophy of a room built by Sigizmund Krzhizhanovskii in his short stories of the 1920s. The next three chapters focus on interiors of three different cinematic genres. The fourth chapter looks closely at films created by Evgenii Bauer, showing the director's innovative techniques of framing and set-design. The fifth chapter explores the film Tret'ia Meshchanskaia by Abram Room, focusing on the director's employment of the room as a structural device of the film. The last chapter analyses two lyrical comedies by Boris Barnet to show the comic effect produced by the empty room and domestic objects in his films, and also focuses on the image of staircase. In conclusion, I speculate that the representation of interior spaces in the period in question goes beyond genre, medium, and narrative structure and becomes an important and culturally dynamic motif of the time.
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Solywoda, Stephanie. "Internal visions, external changes : Russian religious philosophy 1905-1940." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:57d397d1-0a4d-484b-b325-a2977c5f23b7.

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This thesis tests the hypothesis that between 1905 and 1940 Russian religious philosophy changed, and that this can be gauged by looking at how the meanings of four ideas (all-unity, sobornost', Sophia and Godmanhood) changed in that time. By looking at religious philosophy through these ideas we can better understand the intellectual climate of the period. The proposal that Russian religious philosophy should be considered a coherent school of thought and the hypothesis that it would be useful to look at its four central ideas are raised and challenged. The theory that a 'discourse' of religious philosophy united texts in this period is examined, and it is concluded that discourse theory can act as an aid in analysis of religious philosophy. Religious philosophy before the Revolution, the history of the Revolution and its influence on philosophy are examined and its productivity is explored. Post-revolutionary Russian religious thought focusing on the experience of exile is also examined, concluding that the political and social upheaval that Russians were subjected to in the first half of the twentieth century added to and complicated the meaning of the Revolution. Themes of isolation and exclusion become more prevalent in emigration, and religious philosophy also becomes more theological. The findings of this research are (1) that changes within religious philosophy took place and can be detected through the careful study of the ideas that make up this philosophy; (2) that these changes can only partially be attributed to external circumstances because internal constraints also affected the capacity of these ideas to change; (3) that these changes were part of a decline in production, popularity or relevance of religious philosophy; and (4) that it is possible to explain why certain areas of their use remained relevant while others became obsolete.
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Flynn, Moya. "Global frameworks, local realities : migrant resettlement in the Russian Federation." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2001. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/1399/.

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The thesis explores the 'return' migration and resettlement experience of members of ethnic Russian and Russian speaking migrant populations who over the period 1991-2000 left their homes in the former republics of the Soviet Union to resettle on the territory of the Russian Federation, their 'historical homeland'. The study focuses upon individual experiences of resettlement in two regions of the Russian Federation, but locates these experiences within the context of the wider regional, national and global migration regimes. The thesis traces the development of the institutions and legislation of the Russian federal and regional migration regimes over the period 1995-2001. The study demonstrates that the way in which the migration process (the migration movement and subsequent resettlement) and the space of 'return' are constructed, through political and non-political discourse and practice, often conflicts with migrant experiences of the same process and their expectations of 'return'. It charts how migrants, despite displacement and the often constraining features of the surrounding migration environment, begin to re-construct their own sense of 'home' at the site of settlement. The study concludes that rather than the migration process of the Russian populations from the former republics being a 'return' to a 'homeland', for the individual migrant the process represents an attempt to re-create an immediate 'home', that is primarily achieved through a reliance upon personal networks of family and friends.
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Bartman, Christi Scott. "Lawfare use of the definition of aggressive war by the Soviet and Russian governments /." Bowling Green, Ohio : Bowling Green State University, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=bgsu1241726718.

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Kenna, Timothy C. "The distribution and history of nuclear weapons related contamination in sediments from the Ob River, Siberia as determined by isotopic ratios of Plutonium, Neptunium, and Cesium." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/29059.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Joint Program in Oceanography (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2002.
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This thesis addresses the sources and transport of nuclear weapons related contamination in the Ob River region, Siberia. In addition to being one of the largest rivers flowing into the Arctic Ocean, the bulk of the former Soviet Union's nuclear fuel reprocessing and weapons testing facilities (i.e. Mayak, Tomsk-7, and Semipalitinsk) are located within the Ob drainage basin. The atom ratios 240Pu/239Pu, 237Np/239Pu, and 137Cs/240Pu, measured by magnetic-sector ICP-MS, are used to distinguish between contamination derived from global fallout and contamination derived from local sources. Deposition chronologies estimated for sediment cores are used to construct a record of weapons related contamination at the sites sampled. Contaminant records indicate that in addition to debris from atmospheric weapons tests, materials derived from local sources have also played a role in nuclear weapons related contamination of the Ob region. Isotopic data presented in this study clearly demonstrate that non-fallout contamination has been transported the full length of the Tobol, Irtysh, and Ob Rivers (i.e. the tributaries draining Mayak, Semipalitinsk, and Tomsk-7, respectively). In several instances, unique isotopic compositions are observed in sediments collected from tributaries draining each of the suspected non-fallout sources. In such cases, these materials and their deposition ages have been used to link contamination in the Ob delta to Mayak, Tomsk-7, or Semipalitinsk. Linear transport rate estimates (km yr-1) indicate that contaminated sediments transit between source tributaries and the Ob delta on time-scales of [less than or equal to] l year.
(cont.) These estimates suggest that a catastrophic release of contamination due to dam failure at one of the many reservoirs located at both Mayak and Tomsk-7 that contain high levels of radioactive waste would result in measurable levels of contamination in the delta within as little as 1 year. Isotopic concentrations in sequentially extracted sediments containing weapons related contamination reveal that the majority of plutonium and neptunium (80 to 90 percent) behaves in a similar fashion regardless of the source and is removed by treating the sediments with citrate-dithionite. This indicates that plutonium and neptunium are not truly refractory and likely associate with redox sensitive sedimentary components. Isotopic ratios measured in extracted fractions suggest that only a minor fraction of contamination is associated with acid leachable or acid digestible sedimentary phases.
by Timothy Cope Kenna.
Ph.D.
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Martinkus, Andrius. "'Russian ideas' evolution in the 'classical' eurasism philosophy"." Doctoral thesis, Lithuanian Academic Libraries Network (LABT), 2011. http://vddb.laba.lt/obj/LT-eLABa-0001:E.02~2011~D_20110221_150505-26714.

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The ideological evolution of the intellectual and political movement existed in postrevolutionary Russian emigration in the third and fourth decades of the XX century is analyzed in this dissertation. The ideological transformation of the Eurasians movement (which was defined as "degeneration of Russian idea to the Kremlin mafia universal idea of hegemony) was determined by the rivalry between different conceptions witc were represented by N.Tubetzkoy, P.Savicky, G.Florovsky and L.Karsavin. L.Karsavin role (lived in Kaunas since 1928) in this dramatic movement's evolution which culmination was the split of the movement in 1929 is analyzed in this dissertation.
Disertacijoje analizuojama trečiajame ir ketvirtajame XX a.dešimtmečiuose porevoluiucinėje rusų emigracijoje veikusio intelektualinio ir politinio sąjūdžio - "eurazininkų" - idėjinė evoliucija. Nustatoma, kad idėjinė eurazininkų judėjimo transformacija (kuri dažnai apibūdinama kaip "Rusijos idėjos išsigimimas į Kremliaus mafijos pasaulinės hegemonijos idealą") buvo nulemta skirtingų koncepcijų, kurioms atstovavo pirmiausia N.Trubeckojus, P.Savickis, G.Florovskis ir L.Karsavinas, konkurencijos, atvedusios į 1929 m. judėjimo skilimą. Atskirai nagrinėjamas L.Karsavino (nuo 1928 m. gyvenusio Kaune), suvaidinusio ypatingą vaidmenį klasikinio eurazizmo idėjinėje evoliucijoje, "eurazinis" palikimas.
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Sell, Daniel James. "Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin's United Russia the how and why of Russia's new party of power /." Columbus, Ohio : Ohio State University, 2008. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1226594286.

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Books on the topic "Russia (Federation) – History – Philosophy"

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1959-, Allensworth Wayne. The Russian question: Nationalism, modernization, and post-Communist Russia. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield, 1998.

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Russian messianism: Third Rome, holy revolution, communism and after. London: Routledge, 2000.

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The Russian moment in world history. Princeton, N.J: Princeton University Press, 2003.

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Kuzyk, Boris. Rossii︠a︡ v prostranstve i vremeni: Istorii︠a︡ budushchego. Moskva: In-t ėkonomicheskikh strategiĭ, 2004.

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Voli︠a︡ k dostoinstvu. Novosibirsk: Sova, 2007.

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Prostranstvo mysli: Istoki nat︠s︡ionalʹnogo kharaktera. Sankt-Peterburg: Aleteĭi︠a︡, 2009.

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Russia and the idea of Europe: A study in identity and international relations. London: Routledge, 1995.

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Sverkhėvoli︠u︡t︠s︡ii︠a︡ i Vysshiĭ Razum Mirozdanii︠a︡; superėtnos Rusov: Ot mutantov k bogochelovechestvu : kratkoe izlozhenie Otkrytii︠a︡, kotoroe perevorachivaet Nauchnui︠u︡ kartinu Mira : kosmogonii︠a︡, anntropogenez, ėtnogenez. 2nd ed. Moskva: Metagalaktika, 2006.

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Sverkhėvoli︠u︡t︠si︡i︠a︡ i vysshiĭ razum mirozdanii︠a︡: Superėtnos Rusov : ot mutantov k bogochelovechestvu. Moskva: Metagalaktika, 2005.

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Besant, Annie Wood. Ėvoli͡u︡t͡s︡ii͡a︡ zhizni: Sbornik stateĭ i lekt͡s︡iĭ. Samara: Izd-vo "Samarskiĭ Dom pechati", 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Russia (Federation) – History – Philosophy"

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Bartlett, Roger. "The Russian Federation after 1991: Free Market and Democracy?" In A History of Russia, 288–97. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-04372-6_9.

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Semukhina, Olga. "Criminology in Russia." In The Handbook of the History and Philosophy of Criminology, 422–36. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781119011385.ch26.

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Vodichev, Evgeny. "Universities in Russia: Current Reforms Through the Prism of Soviet Heritage and International Practice." In Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, 175–90. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9636-1_11.

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Ermilov, Pavel. "Feodor Uspenskij and his Critics in Late Nineteenth-Century Russia. A Debate Concerning Byzantine Philosophy." In Studies in Byzantine History and Civilization, 187–96. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.sbhc-eb.1.100967.

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Lowry, Anna. "Russia’s Digital Economy Program: An Effective Strategy for Digital Transformation?" In The Palgrave Handbook of Digital Russia Studies, 53–75. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-42855-6_4.

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AbstractThis chapter focuses on the state program “Digital Economy of the Russian Federation” (2017) and its subsequent transformation into the national project (2018) to be implemented from 2018 to 2024. It examines the effectiveness of the government’s strategy in this area and provides an analysis of the program’s content in terms of its main objectives and mechanisms of implementation, drawing on the constructive criticism of the program in the literature. It also reviews the history of the development of the program, main actors involved in its design and implementation, and the nature of the decision-making process.
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Slaboch, Matthew. "Tocqueville’s Philosophy of History: Its Meaning and Implications for Russia and Central and Eastern Europe." In Exploring the Social and Political Economy of Alexis de Tocqueville, 83–99. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-34937-0_5.

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Yue, Daiyun. "Connecting China, Russia, and the West; Synthesizing Literature, History, and Philosophy: Preface to Foreign Writers and Chinese Culture." In China Academic Library, 123–25. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-1116-0_10.

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McFaul, Michael. "The Russian Federation." In The Cambridge History of Russia, 352–80. Cambridge University Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/chol9780521811446.015.

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Bakhurst, David. "Idealism in Russia." In The Cambridge History of Philosophy 1870–1945, 60–66. Cambridge University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/chol9780521591041.006.

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"Chapter Six. Vasilii Zenkovskii And The History Of Russian Philosophy." In Reformulating Russia, 251–96. BRILL, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004192867.i-328.44.

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Conference papers on the topic "Russia (Federation) – History – Philosophy"

1

Kochetova, YU A. "On the issue of the concept of public control in the Russian Federation." In Scientific dialogue: Questions of philosophy, sociology, history, political science. ЦНК МОАН, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/spc-01-07-2020-01.

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Blinova, T. N., and D. S. Egupova. "The problem of oncological diseases in children in Russia." In Scientific dialogue: Questions of philosophy, sociology, history, political science. ЦНК МОАН, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/spc-01-06-2020-01.

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Petrishchev, YU R. "Change of cultural paradigms in Russia and the Western world." In Scientific dialogue: Questions of philosophy, sociology, history, political science. ЦНК МОАН, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/spc-01-05-2019-01.

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Hudoborodov, A. L., and A. V. Samohina. "Place and role of governors in the political life of Russia: history and modernity." In Scientific dialogue: Questions of philosophy, sociology, history, political science. ЦНК МОАН, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/spc-01-11-2019-06.

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Kovalenko, A. I. "Sociocultural foundations of the formation of the spiritual world of the Eastern Cossacks outskirts of Russia." In Scientific dialogue: Questions of philosophy, sociology, history, political science. ЦНК МОАН, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/spc-01-05-2020-05.

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Gaynullin, Iskander. "DESTRUCTIVE ABRASION PROCESSES STUDY IN ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES PLACEMENT (KUIBYSHEV AND NIZHNEKAMSK RESERVOIRS, RUSSIA)." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b31/s9.044.

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Gusarova, Marina. "THE RUSSIAN IDEA IN THE STATE AND CULTURAL LIFE OF RUSSIA: FROM HISTORY TO THE PRESENT." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b31/s10.082.

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Bobrova, Maria. "REFLECTION OF SOCIAL CHANGES IN THE PROPER NAMES (ON THE TOPONYMICAL MATERIALS OF PERM KRAI, RUSSIA)." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b31/s8.023.

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Gribovskiy, Mikhail. "UNIVERSITY TEACHING COMMUNITY OF RUSSIA LATE XIX � EARLY XX CENTURIES: FORMS OF MANIFESTATION OF CORPORATE IDENTITY." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b31/s8.038.

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Gurgov, Moisej. "Genesis of the Institute of Arbitration Courts in the Russian Federation." In Current problems of jurisprudence. ru: Publishing Center RIOR, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29039/02058-6/064-069.

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The article is devoted to the history of the emergence and development of arbitration courts in Russia, the author investigated the prerequisites for the emergence of prototypes of arbitration courts in ancient times, the evolution of the institution of arbitration courts in Russia since the times of Ancient Russia to the present
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Reports on the topic "Russia (Federation) – History – Philosophy"

1

Баттахов, Петр Петрович. ПРОБЛЕМЫ И ОСОБЕННОСТИ ПРАВОВОГО РЕГУЛИРОВАНИЯ СОЦИАЛЬНОГО ПРЕДПРИНИМАТЕЛЬСТВА В РОССИИ. DOI CODE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/1815-1337-2021-51857.

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The article discusses the history of social entrepreneurship development in Russia. The concept and activities of a new social project in the country are being studied, legal regulation of entrepreneurial, social legal relations of subjects of law is being studied. Particular attention is paid to the requirements for the establishment of separate legal regulations for social enterprises. In the future, the author identifies a change in the vector of development of social entrepreneurship in the Russian Federation and assistance from the state in various priority areas in order to develop economic entities. It is proposed to improve some articles of the current legislation and, at best, to adopt a separate federal law "On Social Entrepreneurship of the Russian Federation."
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