Vestnik – Issue 16, Fall 2014
Vestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read More…and certainly not because the West created the Russian LGBTQ community. Nonetheless, promoting an image of Russia’s LGBTQ community as a foreign creation is a good way to create a…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read More…under communism. “The Question of Genre” compares the literature of ancient Rus with that of the ancient Anglo-Saxons. “Tolstoy and Dostoevsky” compares the ontology presented in War and Peace and…
Read MoreVestnik was launched by SRAS in 2004 as one of the world’s first online academic journals focused on showcasing student research. We welcome and invite papers written by undergraduates, graduates,…
Read More…Community” we are introduced to life in Russian kommunalki, or communal apartments. We have also left room for political analysis with “US-Russia Relations After September 11th, 2001: A Game Theory…
Read More…Customs Union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia (CU) which came into effect in 2010. In 2012, a Common Economic Space, introducing “free movement of goods, services, capital, and labor” was…
Read More…and their supply, which will finally free the country from its “gas needle;” reevaluation of the energy sector in compliance with the requirements of the Treaty Establishing the Energy Community…
Read More…in the bureaucracy responsible for ruling the Kazakhs, established their own commercial networks, and began to step up colonizing activities, focusing particularly on settling Russian peasants on Kazakh land.[21] The…
Read More…of all ages. This table gave away free items, such as an anti-smog mask and pamphlet-like children’s books The day’s events began with a word from several speakers on the…
Read More…Vladimir Putin, in the below televised addressed, offered a compromise that is now expected to be passed into law. How this will be accepted by the public is yet to…
Read More…all notions of this Marxist “government-free” society had completely disappeared. Stalin, in a 1939 telegram to party and NKVD officials, permitted torture and pardoned its earlier use by stating, “The…
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