In a revision of his doctoral dissertation for the University of Southern California, Tsygankov (international relations and political science, San Francisco State U.) analyzes the foreign economic policies of successor states of the Soviet Union besides Russia. He finds that some have looked toward Russia and others away, and that the determining factor is the strength of the national identity of the new states. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
States and Conflict in the Former USSR
The Politics of Religion in Russia and the New States of Eurasia
Karen Dawisha, S. Frederick Starr Roman Szporluk. Jan Zaprudnik is adjunct professor at the Harriman Institute of Columbia University and the director of the Belarusian Institute of Science and Arts in New York .
She lived in the western town of Brody until the age of thirty and cried when she had to move to Kiev . By her own account , Brody is her world , and she would much rather live there than in Kiev . She obviously understands Russian well ...
Stewart , Philip D. , 1968 Political Power in the Soviet Union : A Study of Decision - making in Stalingrad , p.110 . Bobbs - Merrill , Indianapolis . 31 . Hill and Frank , op . cit . , pp . 98-99 . 32 . Hahn , Jeffrey W. , 1989 " Power ...
Economics: Economies in Transition : Understanding the Movement Towards Markets
... especially after he won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1958. Yet in 1962 , a writer named Alexander Solzhenitsyn ( sohl - zheh - NEET - sin ) was allowed to | Soviet science scored a triumph when Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became.
This book surveys Russia's relations with the world since 1992 and assesses the future prospect for the foreign policy of Europe's largest country.
Provides both historical and current perspectives on life in the eleven republics which emerged after the collapse of the Soviet Union and formed a voluntary association of their countries.
Competing Sovereignties in the Former Soviet Union