Academic literature on the topic 'Russia Leningrad'

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Journal articles on the topic "Russia Leningrad"

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Potemkin, A. D. "Calypogeia fissa (Calypogeiaceae, Marchantiophyta) in the Northwestern European Russia." Novosti sistematiki nizshikh rastenii 52, no. 1 (2018): 173–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.31111/nsnr/2018.52.1.173.

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Calypogeia fissa is a species poorly known in Russia, which description has not been published in native literature since 1936. It is reported for the first time for the mainland Leningrad Region fr om the Kurgalsky Peninsula, near the Russian-Estonian border. Previously it was collected in the Leningrad Region in Hogland Island, Gulf of Finland. These are the only known recent records of C. fissa fr om the Northwestern European Russia at its eastern lim it of distribution in Europe. The species is represented in the study area by C. fissa f. subintegrifolia, which may be easily confused in the field with the other species of Calypogeia due to its mostly entire leaves. Morphological description and photographs of C. fissa from the Leningrad Region and its habitat in the Kurgalsky Peninsula are provided. Distribution, ecology, variation and differentiation of C. fissa are discussed.
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Лебедев, П. А., Л. П. Трофимук, А. В. Карамышева та Р. К. Пузанский. "УСПЕШНЫЙ ОПЫТ АККЛИМАТИЗАЦИИ КЕДРОВОГО СТЛАНИКА (PINUS PUMILA (PALL.) REGEL) НА СЕВЕРЕ ЛЕНИНГРАДСКОЙ ОБЛАСТИ." Biosfera 12, № 4 (2020): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.24855/biosfera.v12i4.553.

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The Siberian dwarf pine (Pinus pumila (Pall.) Regel) has been successfully acclimatized on the northern shore of Glubokoye lake (Vyborg District of the Leningrad Region, the Russian Federation). This is the largest population (56 plants) of dwarf pine in Leningrad Region comprised of adult plants brought from the native habitat of the species. A survey of this population and statistical processing of data were carried out in comparison with the long known P. pumula population of the Scientific Experimental Station "Otradnoye" (Botanical Institute of the Russia Academy of Sciences). The dwarf pine successfully tolerates the present-day climate of the Northwest of Russia and yields full-grain seeds.
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Garczyk, Bartłomiej. "Ethnic Structure of St Petersburg – Petrograd – Leningrad in the Period of 1703-1991." Studia Historiae Oeconomicae 31, no. 1 (2013): 87–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/sho-2013-0006.

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Abstract This article presents a multinational and multireligious character of St. Petersburg since the founding of the city to the collapse of the Soviet Union. An ethnic and cultural mosaic was also an important feature in other centers of Russia, including Moscow and Odessa, as well as forming part of the national capital of the Russian Empire in Warsaw, Riga and Tallinn. St. Petersburg is a city but of a symbolic and unique character. It is the subject of literary impressions and creative inspiration for generations of artists. In addition, St. Petersburg - Petrograd - Leningrad was the capital of a multinational and multireligious Russian Empire, Soviet Russia, and since 1918, it was the second most important city of the Soviet Union. The author’s intention is also to present the history of St. Petersburg - Petrograd - Leningrad, as seen through the prism of the history of national minorities living in it.
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Kuznetsova, Ekaterina S., Olga A. Kataeva, Dmitry E. Himelbrant, and Jurga Motiejūnaitė. "Lichens and allied fungi of the Ragusha River Protected Area (Leningrad Region, Russia)." Folia Cryptogamica Estonica 53 (November 10, 2016): 71. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/fce.2016.53.09.

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The lichen biota of the Ragusha River (protected area in Leningrad Region) is studied. In total 221 species (211 lichenized, 5 lichenicolous and 5 saprobic fungi) are listed. Lecanora perpruinosa is new to North-Western European Russia. Lathagrium fuscovirens, Pronectria erythrinella, Protoblastenia rupestris, Thelidium minutulum, T. zwackhii and Tremella hypogymniae are reported for the first time for Leningrad Region, and Ochrolechia bahusiensis for Eastern Leningrad Region. The most noteworthy part of lichen biota is the complex of 21 calcicolous lichens. Eleven of them are known in the region only from the Ragusha River valley.
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Stepanchikova, Irina S., Mikhail P. Andreev, Dmitry E. Himelbrant, et al. "The lichens of Bolshoy Tuters Island (Tytärsaari), Leningrad Region, Russia." Folia Cryptogamica Estonica 54 (September 13, 2017): 95. http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/fce.2017.54.14.

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The updated checklist of Tuters Island (Leningrad Region, Russia) is presented. Of 331 species of recognized biota, 314 species of lichens, 16 lichenicolous fungi and one non-lichenized saprobic fungus are reported from Tuters Island. Of them, 202 species are new to the study area. Aspicilia epiglypta, Fuscidea praeruptorum, Micarea byssacea and Sarcogyne hypophaeoides are reported for the first time for Russia, Roselliniella stereocaulorum – for European Russia, Aspicilia polychroma, Carbonea vorticosa, Cercidospora stereocaulorum, Cladonia ciliata f. flavicans, C. rangiformis, Parmelia ernstiae, Plectocarpon cf. encausticum and Roselliniella cladoniae – for North-Western European Russia; Bachmanniomyces uncialicola, Bacidina sulphurella, Micarea botryoides, Miriquidica griseoatra and Stereocaulon nanodes are new to the Leningrad Region.
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Kotkova, V. M. "New data on aphyllophoraceous fungi of the protected areas of the Leningrad Region. VII. Planned protected areas of the Vyborg District." Novosti sistematiki nizshikh rastenii 49 (2015): 161–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.31111/nsnr/2015.49.161.

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The paper provides the first data on aphyllophoroid fungi of planned protected areas «Lakes Anisimovskiye» (Kemppilä), «Vesenniy» and «Prigranichny» (Paatio) (Vyborg District, Leningrad Region). Among 107 species of fungi recorded for natural monument «Lakes Anisimovskiye» (А), 7 species are protected in the Lenin grad Region. Among 91 species of fungi recorded for natural monument «Vesenniy» (В), Athelia tenuispora and Hyphodermella corrugata are new for the Leningrad Region, and 10 species are protected in the Region. In a planned regional complex sanctuary «Prigranichny» (П) 69 species of aphyllophoroid fungi were found, including Tretomyces microsporus recorded for the first time in Russia, and 6 species protected in the Leningrad Region. New localities of Ganoderma lucidum from Red Data Book of Russian Federation (Krasnaya…, 2008) were found in the planned protected areas «Vesenniy» and «Prigranichny».
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Tsinchenko, G. M., and I. S. Orlova. "Prevention of Youth Deviations in Russia and Abroad." Administrative Consulting, no. 1 (March 22, 2021): 97–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.22394/1726-1139-2021-1-97-105.

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Goals and objectives. The article analyzes the resources of support for families with disabled children living in the Leningrad region. There is substantial state support for this category of families, developing the potential of non-state support resources. The results of the government’s efforts to support families with children with disabilities, as well as the tasks set to be solved in the near and long term, are considered.Methods. The study used a set of general scientific methods, such as analysis, synthesis, generalization, comparison, system-functional and integrated approach. Within the framework of the stated theme, theoretical provisions and modern approaches have been organized by studying the works of various authors, regulatory documents and official statistics.The theoretical and practical significance of the study is that it can be the basis for further study of social resources and life strategies of families with children with disabilities, their transformation. The analysis provides an opportunity to identify the problems of families with children with disabilities in Leningrad, actualizes the importance of state policy regarding these categories of families, both in the process of formation and in its implementation. The materials provide us with positive results achieved by the authorities of the Leningrad region and identify ways to further develop both state and non-state social support for families with children with disabilities in the region.Results and conclusions. The article presents the results of the research of the resources of state and non-state social support for families with children with disabilities in The Leningrad region. Conclusions have been drawn on the need to unite the efforts of state and non-state resources in this direction.
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Tolmacheva, Marina. "Anna Dolinina 1923–2017." Review of Middle East Studies 51, no. 2 (2017): 339–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/rms.2017.88.

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Anna Arkadievna Iskoz-Dolinina, a Russian and Soviet Arabist with a list of over 200 publications, passed away on 16 April 2017. She was born on 12 March 1923 in Petrograd (later Leningrad, now St. Petersburg, Russia). Her father was a Leningrad University professor, a specialist on Dostoyevsky. Anna's original plan was to study German literature, but during WWII the family were evacuated with parts of the University to Tashkent. There, she became fascinated by the Orient and developed an interest in Arabic literature. The choice of Arabic vs. other languages was made easier by the publication in 1945 of the book Among Arabic Manuscripts (“Nad arabskimi rukopisiami”) by the leading Russian Arabist of the time Ignatii Iulianovich Krachkovskii (Ignaty Krachkovsky, 1883–1951).
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Efimova, G. A., and Yu Yu Inshina. "Legislative update of the norms for rational use of agricultural land in the Russian Federation." Zemleustrojstvo, kadastr i monitoring zemel' (Land management, cadastre and land monitoring), no. 2 (January 22, 2021): 88–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.33920/sel-04-2102-02.

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The article substantiates the expediency of updating the existing legal norms and proposes to update the system of legislative support for the rational land use in the Russian Federation, which is presented on the example of the Leningrad region. According to Rosreestr office of the Leningrad Region, the area of arable lands (and agricultural land in general) is shortened . The imperfect legal system, the need to modernize the systems of assessment, monitoring, protection, cadastre and control remain topical issues not only in the assessed region, but in Russia as a whole. Ineffective functioning of legal institutions impedes the planning and forecasting processes in agricultural land use.
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Kunnap, V. "The Paper "Stream"." Public Voices 2, no. 3 (2017): 7. http://dx.doi.org/10.22140/pv.385.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Russia Leningrad"

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Williams, Christopher. "Soviet public health : a case study of Leningrad, 1917-1932." Thesis, University of Essex, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.236455.

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Horst, Bradley Thomas. ""In the Scale of Nature Each Seed is Important." Social Transformation, Food, and the Siege of Leningrad, 1941-1942." Master's thesis, Temple University Libraries, 2013. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/216523.

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History<br>M.A.<br>The 900 day German blockade of Leningrad fostered an environment in which social relationships, which were pruned and altered during the 1930s, were reinvigorated and reinvented by Leningraders. By the outbreak of the war in the summer of 1941, Stalinist social engineering policies had eroded previously normalized social connections and networks. At the height of the Terror, it became beneficial and advantageous for Soviet citizens to cut off many of their social relationships that had been built up over years. The family became the site of the primary emphasis of social interaction. The strengthening of the family system under Stalin created family units that were remarkably elastic and durable. This familial elasticity allowed Leningraders to reknit social relationships during the siege which became primary as food became central to survival. Without intense monitoring and oversight from the state, Leningraders were forced to rekindle social ties and relationships to survive.<br>Temple University--Theses
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Nealy, James Allen Jr. "THE METRO METROES: SHAPING SOVIET POST-WAR SUBJECTIVITIES IN THE LENINGRAD UNDERGROUND." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1404224329.

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Peeling, Siobhan. ""Out of place" in the postwar city : practices, experiences and representations of displacement during the resettlement of Leningrad at the end of the blockade." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2010. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11700/.

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This thesis explores the repopulation of Leningrad following the blockade of the city during the Second World War. In the years after the lifting of the siege blockade survivors remaining in Leningrad were joined annually by hundreds of thousands of incomers. However, while the siege has recently been the subject of a number of scholarly and literary treatments, much less attention has been paid to what happened next in terms of the mass resettlement of the city. Accounts of the consequences of the blockade that touch upon the postwar population have deployed the term ‘Leningraders’ as shorthand for a cohesive community of blockade survivors, embedded in the culture and landscape of the city. Even pieces of work that have portrayed post-siege Leningrad as a ‘city of migrants’ have concentrated on the impact of the loss of the prewar population rather than on the multifarious experiences of its itinerant populations. The thesis addresses the role of widespread experiences of displacement and resettlement in structuring relationships among individuals and between citizens and the authorities in the post-siege civic environment. It examines the repopulation in the context of evolving Soviet practices of population management after the war and in terms of the intersection of population movements with the re-affirmation of a civic community in a city which had lost a vast proportion of its population, just as it gained the basis for a powerful new narrative of belonging. It demonstrates how competing visions of the desired postwar order on a national and local scale were constructed and contested in relation to displaced people who were often targeted as a potentially transgressive presence in the postwar landscape.
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Obertreis, Julia. "Tränen des Sozialismus : Wohnen in Leningrad zwischen Alltag und Utopie 1917-1937 /." Köln : Böhlau, 2004. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb393022396.

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Bertrand, Géraldine. "La transformation du gouvernement local en Russie : le cas de Leningrad/Saint-Pétersbourg, ville sujet de la Fédération, 1989-2000." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005IEPP0039.

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Cette thèse traite des transformations politiques en Russie de 1989 à 2000 à partir d'un gouvernement périphérique. Le double processus engagé par la perestroïka, de démocratisation et d'autonomisation des entités fédérées, a placé Leningrad - notre terrain d'études - au coeur des mutations du pays puisqu'il y a permis, plus qu'ailleurs en RSFSR, le renouvellement du personnel politique au profit des réformateurs ainsi que la redéfinition de l'identité de la ville, renommée Saint-Pétersbourg dès 1991. Or cette recherche a montré qu'en dix ans, la capacité politique de la ville de Pierre n'avait cessé de faiblir du fait de la perte de légitimité de ses représentants - et des institutions qu'ils incarnent. Les dirigeants locaux n'ont pu renouer avec les traditions locales de gouvernement qui avaient transformé Leningrad en modèle de développement économique et social de l'URSS. La difficile régulation de conflits, concernant notamment la définition et la défense des intérêts locaux, a freiné le processus de démocratisation de la vie politique et a nui à l'efficacité politique des dirigeants, désormais sanctionnés par les urnes. Cette conclution est le fruit d'une analyse centrée sur les élites locales, sur leurs liens avec les autorités centrales mais aussi avec les électeurs, à l'origine de la nouvelle légitimité démocratique. Elle souligne la spécificité de l'échelon local et le poids du passé mais aussi le rôle du contexte et des apprentissages - ces derniers comptant chaque jour davantage sur l'orientation des changements - , et offre une meilleure compréhension des mécanismes de démocratisation, de leadership et de régionalisation à partir d'un gouvernement local<br>This thesis deals with political transformations in Russia from a local government, from 1989 to 2000. The double process, started by the perestroïka, of democratization and of autonomization of federated entities, placed Leningrad - our case of study -, to the heart of the changes in the country : the reform permitted there, more than anywhere else in Russia, to renew the political leaders in favour of democrats and to redefine the identity of the town, renamed St. Petersburg in 1991. Nevertheless our study has shown that the political capacity of the city has become weaker in ten years because of the lack of legitimacy of its representatives and of the institutions thy embody. Local elites could not revive local traditions of governement that transformed Leningrad into a model of economic and social development for the USSR. The difficult resolution of conflict, especially to clarify and protect local interests, has disturbed the process of democratization and has harmed the political efficiency of the leaders, henceforth sanctioned by the vote. This conclusion is the result of an analysis centred on local elites, whiche valorizes as the influence of central authorities as those of the citizens, at the root of the new democratic legitimacy. It not only underlines the specifity of local level and the weight of soviet legacy, but also the role of the context and of learnings, which weight more every day on the orientation's process. So, this study enables a better comprehension of democratization's mecanisms, leadership and regionalization, from a local point of view
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Ganzenmüller, Jörg. "Das belagerte Leningrad 1941-1944 : die Stadt in den Strategien von Angreifern und Verteidigern /." Paderborn : F. Schöningh, 2007. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb410286567.

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Pakhomova, Natalia. "Marginal voices : Sergei Dovlatov and his characters in the context of the Leningrad literature of the 1960s and 70s." Thesis, McGill University, 2001. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=38255.

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In spite of the growing interest of Russian and Western scholars in Sergei Dovlatov and his art, his place in Russian literature has not yet been clearly defined. His position as a writer in Russia in the 1960s and early 70s was ambiguous due to his opposition to the traditional Soviet canon and rejection by the current literary establishment. However, he later gained recognition and popularity as an emigre writer in the United States. The concept of 'marginality' colours his biography and art, for his life itself was a succession of marginal experiences and marginality is the key topic of his writings.<br>Marginality unifies Dovlatov's art. This is evident in his marginal status as a writer in and outside the Soviet Union, and in his writing which uses the underappreciated short form of narration (the novella and short story), develops a non-traditional conversational style, pursues the themes of non-conventional behaviour and introduces eccentric characters.<br>However, it is not possible to discuss Dovlatov's status as a marginal writer without contextualizing his life and art in the ambience of the entire generation of Leningrad writers of the sixties. Writers and poets such as Brodskii, Goliavkin, Gubin, Vakhtin and Ufliand do not only represent the culture of Leningrad's artistic non-conformists, they are also Dovlatov's prototypes and protagonists. Apart from their marginal status, all these writers shared the determination to make independent choices in life and in art. They refused to be viewed as marginal authors by the dominant canon, which disregarded their works as insignificant. Here as well marginality emerges as a literary concept and a behavioural model, shaped by societal norms (the positive type of citizen or official Soviet writer) and traditional canons (the Russian didactic tradition or Soviet ideological writing). This literary concept includes an orientation towards American literature, the creation of marginal characters and themes as well as an exploration of different styles.<br>The works of writers of the Leningrad circle laid the foundation for the emergence of a literary phenomenon such as Dovlatov. It is in delineating this context that this dissertation demonstrates Dovlatov's original approach to marginality, as well as the way he turned his life experience into literature and became a spokesman for neglected fellow writers and citizens.
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Gruszka, Sarah. "Voix du pouvoir, voix de l’intime. Les journaux personnels du siège de Leningrad (1941-1944)." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019SORUL170.

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Épisode tragique largement méconnu du public occidental et fortement légendé du côté soviétique, le siège que subit Leningrad durant près de 900 jours par les Allemands et leurs alliés est un terrain d’observation privilégié pour étudier la réaction des individus à un contexte de violence et de pression extrêmes (la guerre, le blocus, le stalinisme). Source extrêmement riche mais encore sous-exploitée, les très nombreux journaux personnels tenus par les assiégés permettent une incursion dans leur univers mental, offrant ainsi un éclairage inestimable non seulement sur l’histoire du siège de Leningrad, mais plus largement sur le vécu intime de l’époque stalinienne en temps de guerre. D’une part, ils donnent à voir le rôle de la pratique diariste dans des conditions infrahumaines (écriture de la survie et entreprise testimoniale) et mettent au jour une façon singulière de narrer leur expérience (la mort de masse, la famine, la désorientation), rejoignant à ce titre le grand vivier de la littérature des catastrophes. D’autre part, ils montrent la façon complexe dont les Soviétiques réagissaient à un environnement idéologique saturé de propagande. L’articulation de trois piliers de l’idéologie soviétique (ethos collectiviste, internationalisme, héroïsme) par les diaristes révèle une tension permanente entre discours intime et discours officiel. Elle se manifeste à travers un large spectre de positionnements, allant du discrédit à l’intériorisation de la voix du pouvoir. À ce titre, les journaux personnels permettent d’affiner notre compréhension de l’expérience intime du stalinisme, dont l’étude a souvent été cantonnée aux années 1930<br>A tragic but largely unknown episode for the Western public--and highly distorted on the Soviet side--the siege initiated by the Germans and their allies that Leningrad underwent for almost 900 days is a privileged observation field for studying the reaction of individuals to a context of extreme violence and pressure (the war, the blockade, Stalinism). The many personal diaries kept by the besieged --an extremely rich but still underexploited source--allow one to penetrate into their mental universe and thereby offer an invaluable insight not only on the history of the siege of Leningrad but more generally on the intimate experience of the Stalinist era in times of war. On one hand they let one see the role of diaries in infrahuman conditions (survival writing and testimonial aspect) and bring to light a singular way of narrating this experience (mass death, starvation, disorientation), joining as such the realm of disaster literature. On the other hand, they show the complex way Soviets react to a propaganda-filled ideological environment. The articulation of the three pillars of the Soviet ideology (collectivism, internationalism, heroism) by the diarists reveals a permanent tension between intimate and official discourses. It manifests itself by a wide spectrum of different stands, from total discredit to the internalizing the voice of the power. As such, the personal diaries allow us to refine our comprehension of the intimate experience of Stalinism, whose study often remains restricted to the 1930s
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Kuzmina, Ksenia [Verfasser]. "Capabilities and the insecurity of young Russians: Narrowing the capability gap and reducing inequalities : a qualitative study on 15-18 year old young people from Saint Petersburg, the Leningrad and the Novgorod regions / Ksenia Kuzmina. Fakultät für Erziehungswissenschaft - Research School Education and Capabilities." Bielefeld : Universitätsbibliothek Bielefeld, Hochschulschriften, 2013. http://d-nb.info/1030180733/34.

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Books on the topic "Russia Leningrad"

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Gosudarstvennyĭ russkiĭ muzeĭ (Saint Petersburg, Russia). Gosudarstvennyĭ russkiĭ muzeĭ, Leningrad. Izd-vo Izobrazitelʹnoe iskusstvo, 1987.

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Leaving Leningrad. Brandeis University Press, 2001.

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Gosudarstvennyĭ russkiĭ muzeĭ, Leningrad: Zhivopisʹ. Izd-vo "Avrora", 1988.

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Cherokov, Viktor Sergeevich. Dli︠a︡ tebi︠a︡, Leningrad! 2nd ed. Lenizdat, 1988.

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N, Novouspenskiĭ, ed. The Russian Museum, Leningrad, painting. Aurora Arts, 1988.

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Ruble, Blair A. Leningrad: Shaping a Soviet city. Published for the Institute of Governmental Studies and the Institute of International Studies, University of California, Berkeley [by] University of California Press, 1990.

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Joyce, Graham. Leningrad nights. Millennium, 2000.

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(Russia), Gosudarstvennyĭ Ėrmitazh. Russkai︠a︡ akvarelʹ v sobranii Gosudarstvennogo Ėrmitazha, Leningrad. "Izobrazitelʹnoe iskusstvo", 1988.

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Leningrad: State of siege. Basic Books, 2008.

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Magaeva, S. V. Surviving the blockade of Leningrad. University Press of America, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Russia Leningrad"

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Price, M. Philips. "Leningrad." In Russia Forty Years On. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003243168-2.

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McBride, Joe R., Judith Stilgenbauer, Igor Lacan, Sheauchi Cheng, Scot Medbury, and Deborah L. McBride. "Russia: Leningrad (St. Petersburg) and Stalingrad (Volgograd)." In Reconstruction of Urban Forests. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-64938-8_6.

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Belasky, Paul. "“Pochveniks”—“The Poets of The Soil”: The Geological School of 20th Century Poetry in Leningrad, USSR (St. Petersburg, Russia)." In Soil and Culture. Springer Netherlands, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-2960-7_12.

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Ilič, Melanie. "The Great Terror: Leningrad — a Quantitative Analysis." In Challenging Traditional Views of Russian History. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230506114_7.

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Melnik, Denis. "Repressive Fields: Economic Theory in Late Stalinism and the Leningrad Affair." In Re-Examining the History of the Russian Economy. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-75414-7_7.

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"Leningrad." In A Physician’s Tour in Soviet Russia, edited by Sir James Purves-Stewart. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315112190-2.

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"NEGOTIATING LIFE: LENINGRAD, RUSSIA." In Beyond Perestroika. Brill | Rodopi, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789042027367_006.

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Martyrology, Leningrad. "Memories and Biographies of the Leningrad Terror." In The Russia Reader. Duke University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9780822392583-078.

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"Love and Marriage in Leningrad." In Gender and Survival in Soviet Russia. Bloomsbury Academic, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350139220.ch-006.

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Kozlovskiy, Vladimir V., and Ruslan G. Braslavskiy. "Mosaic sociology in Leningrad." In Russia in Reform: Year-Book [collection of scientific articles]: issue 17. Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/ezheg.2019.3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Russia Leningrad"

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Leipala, Timo. "Arithmometer Production in Leningrad." In 2014 Third International Conference on Computer Technology in Russia and in the Former Soviet Union (SoRuCom). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/sorucom.2014.43.

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Baranova, Olga P., Svetlana Ol Ermolova, and Alexandra Speranskaya. "Epidemiology of sarcoidosis in the Leningrad region of Russia." In ERS International Congress 2017 abstracts. European Respiratory Society, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/1393003.congress-2017.pa3655.

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Yusupov, Rafael, and Mikhail Vous. "History of Informatics and Cybernetics in St Petersburg (Leningrad) Scientific Series." In 2014 Third International Conference on Computer Technology in Russia and in the Former Soviet Union (SoRuCom). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/sorucom.2014.11.

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Petrushenko, Tatiana K., and Tatiana N. Fedorova. "SOCIO-CULTURAL ASPECTS OF SOCIAL WELL-BEING OF THE POPULATION OF THE LOMONOSOV DISTRICT, LENINGRAD REGION." In Problems of sociocultural evolution of Russia and its regions. Tula State Lev Tolstoy Pedagogical University, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22405/978-5-6041453-4-0-2018-269-274.

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Salakhutdinov, Аrtur А. "REGIONAL INNOVATION SYSTEM IN THE EMPLOYMENT OF THE POPULATION IN THE LENINGRAD REGION: STATE AND PROBLEMS." In Problems of sociocultural evolution of Russia and its regions. Tula State Lev Tolstoy Pedagogical University, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22405/978-5-6041453-4-0-2018-394-399.

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Danilov, Dmitry, Natalia Belyaeva, and Sergey Janusz. "Structure of mature mixed pine-and-spruce stands on postagrogenic lands in Leningrad region, Russia." In Research for Rural Development, 2018. Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22616/rrd.24.2018.020.

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Salakhutdinova, Rezeda H. "FEATURES OF THE INNOVATION POLICY OF THE LENINGRAD REGION AS A BORDER REGION: MODERN PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS." In Problems of sociocultural evolution of Russia and its regions. Tula State Lev Tolstoy Pedagogical University, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22405/978-5-6041453-4-0-2018-73-80.

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KOZLOVA, Natalia, Aleksandr BRIUKHANOV, Eduard VASILEV, and Ekaterina SHALAVINA. "ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT OF LIVESTOCK FARMS IN RUSSIA." In RURAL DEVELOPMENT. Aleksandras Stulginskis University, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.15544/rd.2017.189.

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The paper focuses on quantitative assessment of nitrogen flows in a livestock farm under transition to best available techniques BAT system in Russia. Comparative analysis of quantitative estimates of ammonia emissions from housing for dairy cows, fattening pigs, farrowing sows and laying hens was conducted using available literature data and information obtained through a survey of pilot livestock farms in Leningrad Region. Ammonia emission data for existing Russian enterprises were found in the range of BREF emission levels associated with BAT. The nitrogen farm-gate balance was calculated for the farm with 810 dairy cows, 2600 ha of agricultural land and milk yield of 22 kg/day. The nitrogen surplus was 48.3 kg/ha, which was below the limit values and indicated the possibility to increase the application amount of nitrogen fertilisers, however, nitrogen use efficiency of 0.21 was significantly below the European average. The viability of manure storage and spreading techniques recommended by European BREF, namely compost heaps covering and immediate incorporation of organic fertilisers after spreading, was estimated for this farm. The calculated values of total nitrogen losses are reduced by 20%; the saving of mineral fertilizers owing to higher nitrogen content in applied organic fertilisers can be 18 t / year. For the rough assessment of technologies on the initial stage of Russian reference books creation it is practicable to use the data from EU BREF on intensive rearing of pigs and poultry. When farms are assessed on the stage of integrated permits issue, it is feasible to use the measured air concentrations of hazardous substances along with the estimation of the whole-farm environmental impact by nitrogen use efficiency. For such estimates to be applied in Russia, the data needs to be collected and systematised for different categories of farms and for different climatic regions.
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Kozlovskiy, V. "ТРАНСФОРМАЦИЯ МОНОПРОФИЛЬНОГО РЕГИОНАЛЬНОГО ИНДУСТРИАЛИЗМА СЕВЕРО-ЗАПАДА РОССИИ". У Perspektivy social`no-ekonomicheskogo razvitiia prigranichnyh regionov 2019. Институт экономики - обособленное подразделение Федерального исследовательского центра "Карельский научный центр Российской академии наук", 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36867/br.2019.31.25.022.

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В статье рассматривается проблема перехода от сложившейся в советское время монопрофильной индустриальной зависимости моногородов СевероЗапада России к их диверсифицированному социальнокультурному и территориальноэкономическому развитию в условиях рыночной экономики. На примере моногородов Архангельской, Вологодской, Ленинградской областей и Республики Карелия, близких в социальнотерриториальном, административном, промышленном устройстве, обнаруживаются значимые социально экономические и культурные различия. The article discusses the problem of the transition from the monoprofile industrial dependence of the monocities of the NorthWest of Russia to the diversified sociocultural and territorialeconomic development in a market economy. On the example of monocities towns of the Arkhangelsk, Vologda, Leningrad regions and the Republic of Karelia, close in the socioterritorial, administrative, industrial structure, are found significant socioeconomic and cultural differences.
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Glebovsky, Alexander, and Vladimir Ivanov. "Automated Measurement and Control Systems for Spacecrafts and Missile Launches in the USSR: The Pioneering Role of the Elite Engineering Corps of the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute." In 2014 Third International Conference on Computer Technology in Russia and in the Former Soviet Union (SoRuCom). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/sorucom.2014.18.

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Reports on the topic "Russia Leningrad"

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Golovko, Khrystyna. TRAVEL REPORT BY ALEKSANDER JANTA-POŁCZYNSKI «INTO THE USSR» (1932): FROG PERSPECTIVE. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.50.11091.

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The article analyzes a series of materials by Aleksander Janta-Polczynski «Into the USSR» from Soviet Russia during the in 1932, published on «Wiadomości Literackiе». The purpose of this article is explain the uniqueness of the reporter’s style and personality. We want to emphasize the role of Janta-Polczynski as the pioneer of reportage journalism. He was the first who worked professionally in this position in the full sense of this word. Analyzed the cycle of Alexander Janta-Polczynski from Russia, we can emphasize the scale of the reporter’s trip: in 1932 the journalist made the largest journalistic trip to the USSR. Janta visited the Eastern republics, which differed from the popular Moscow and Leningrad. Also, he saw the largest construction in the USSR at this time – which it bragged about russian newspapers – Magnitogorsk and Dneprostroy. For a better understanding are given the visual examples from reportorial texts. It should be noted that for Janta the main task of the reporter is to show what is seen and recorded: only facts and personal experience in communication. This cycle can safely be called a journey and social expedition. The main task for Janta the scene where the reportage takes place is to find proper characters and convince them of the importance of their story. These are the materials of a reporter – an eyewitness, not a researcher, a report from the scene, which pushes the reader to an independent conclusion. We explore that all the Janta-Polczynski texts are inextricably linked by looking into the «middle» of the process: the diversity of what is seen allows the journalist to look for differences and similarities, compare, look at the fundamental components, track changes and distinguish them. Special attention was paid to a low-angle shot in his materials. He describes how Soviet society lives, how factories work, how the system of educating a Soviet person, goes to the movies and exhibitions, communicates with ordinary citizens. Undoubtedly, all this is successfully complemented by the factual detail and uniqueness of the author’s style.
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SM Garrett. Joint U.S./Russian Study on the Development of a Preliminary Cost Estimate of the SAFSTOR Decommissioning Alternative for the Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant Unit #1. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1247.

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Joint US/Russian study on the development of a decommissioning strategy plan for RBMK-1000 unit No. 1 at the Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/574167.

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