Ethnic russians

    • [PDF File]ETHNIC RUSSIAN MINORITY IN ESTONIA

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      number of ethnic Russians living in this area increased so dramati-cally by the time of the fall of the Soviet Union. In the early 1990s, the countries opened a new chapter in their history. From ...


    • [PDF File]The Intelligence of Yakuts and Ethnic Russians in Yakutia

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      and ethnic Russians in the province of Yakutia in eastern Siberia. Yakutia (also known as Sakha, the former indigenous term) is the largest of the 83 provinces of the Russian Federation. It ...


    • The ethnification of Russian nationalism

      people’ he was clearly referring not to ‘the (multi-ethnic) people of Russia’, but to ‘ethnic Russians’ – wherever they may live, also abroad. The expression he used was russkii narod, a concept that in the modern Russian political lexicon had until then been used in the ethnic sense only, not in referring to the political nation.


    • [PDF File]THE BALTIC STATES, ETHNIC RUSSIANS - Middle East Technical University

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      above indicate that whereas ethnic Russians have constituted the biggest minority group in Estonia and Latvia through history, the number of Russians has always been relatively limited in Lithuania. Secondly, the Baltic states differ from each other in terms of their ethnic “dispersals”. While there are


    • [PDF File]Russia - CIEE

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      at home or within their ethnic groups. For example, Tartars speak Tartar, Chuvashes speak Chuvash, and Udmurts speak Udmurt. After Communist rule, these individual languages began to be taught at schools where the ethnic group was prominent. Ethnic Russians are not required to learn other local languages, but students are increasingly studying ...


    • The Ethnic Russian Minority: A Problematic Issue in the Baltic States

      the number of ethnic Russians has declined in all three of the states. This decline is caused mostly by emigration and naturalization. The percentages of Russians in these countries at the beginning of the twenty-first century had changed to: 25.6 percent of the total population in Estonia, 28.8% in Latvia, and 6.4% in Lithuania (Heleniak).


    • Russians in Ukraine: Problems and Prospects - JSTOR

      Russians in Ukraine: Problems and Prospects ROMAN SOLCHANYK Before independence, it would have been difficult to imagine that there could be a "Russian question" in Ukraine. Ukraine and Belarus were probably the two non-Russian Soviet republics where ethnic Russians felt most at home; in


    • The Challenges of Russian Migration Policy: The Influence of Ethnic ...

      the Russian Orthodox Church. In broad terms, ethnic nationalism is equated with “Russia for the Russians,” a concept that supports limiting citizenship to ethnic Russians.3 Endemic to this concept is a determination of what defines an ethnic Russian, a largely (perhaps intentionally) undefined category.


    • [PDF File]Two Sources of the Russian Patrilineal Heritage in Their ... - Cell

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      beyond. Most of the present-day ethnic Russians—approx-imately 100 millions—live currently in the borders of this historic area according to the 2002 year census, and the present sampling (14 regions, 1228 Y chromosomes) is the first that covers this wide area nearly uniformly. Our Y chromosome phylogenetic analysis is designed for


    • Russian ethnic nationalism and religion today - JSTOR

      Russian ethnic nationalists, exploring religio-ideological trends in contemporary Russian ethnic nationalism and assessing their potential. By Russian ethnic nationalists, I refer solely to those individual authors, parties and movements who hold the self- determination of Russians as an ethnic group as a central element


    • [PDF File]Latvia and Its Ethnic Russian Minority: An Improving Yet Perpetually ...

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      ethnic Russians, additionally, experienced a number of challenges relating to this tense ethnic environment, but also as a result of government policies that socially excluded them during the early years of independence in the 1990s, which hindered the community’s ability to integrate


    • [PDF File]The Origins of Soviet Ethnic Cleansing - Harvard University

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      Ethnic Cleansing in the Eurasian Borderlands, 1912–53 Before attempting to explain this Stalinist paradox, I will briefly situate Soviet actions in a contemporary regional context in order to highlight both what was typical and what was distinctive in Soviet ethnic cleansing. I will also specify precisely what I mean by “ethnic cleansing.”


    • The Ethnic Roots of Class Universalism: Rethinking the “Russian ...

      in the case of the ethnic Russians. But because Bolshevism emerged from particular imperial experiences of (socio)ethnic exclusion, it necessarily embedded ethnicity into its socialist class universalism. Four related claims are offered. First, in exploring class and ethnicity as intersectional experiences, I argue that ethnocultural background is


    • [PDF File]TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Introduction 1 2. The Russian Federation’s ...

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      Even ethnic Russians who are seen as sympathizing with foreigners or ethnic minority groups, for example, fans of rap or reggae music, members of other youth sub-cultures, and campaigners against racism, have also been targeted as they are perceived as “unpatriotic” or “traitors”. Attacks have been reported in towns and cities across


    • [PDF File]THE PRESENCE OF ABSENCE: ETHNICITY POLICY IN RUSSIA

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      Russia inherited from the Soviet state a culturally diverse population, with ethnic Russians only making up four fifths of the country’s population. It also inherited an elaborate ... In the 1990s, ethnic policy was overshadowed by struggles over what kind of political system should be introduced, and the pace and character of the economic ...


    • Ethnic Nationalism in the Russian Federation - JSTOR

      ethnic and civic nationalisms have much more in common than is sometimes assumed. All nations have, or had, a cultural-linguistic core (or, as a rare exception, cores) rooted in a dominant ethnic group, which was instrumental in creating a national identity. Even the American nation, despite all its peculiarities, had a domi nant Anglo-Saxon core.6


    • The Ethnic Russian Minority: A Problematic Issue in the Baltic States

      the number of ethnic Russians has declined in all three of the states. This decline is caused mostly by emigration and naturalization. The percentages of Russians in these countries at the beginning of the twenty-first century had changed to: 25.6 percent of the total population in Estonia, 28.8% in Latvia, and 6.4% in Lithuania (Heleniak).


    • Backing the USSR 2.0: Russia’s ethnic minorities and ... - JSTOR

      2003), that Russia’s expansion into predominantly ethnic Russian territories of the former Soviet Union poses a threat to the ethnic minorities’ group position. The incorporation of new ethnic Russian populations – as in the case of Crimea – means that, collectively, ethnic minorities become less numerous relative to ethnic Russians.


    • [PDF File]Deterring Russian Aggression in the Baltic States Through ... - RAND

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      designed to undermine trust in their institutions, foment ethnic and social tensions, and erode confidence in North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) collective defense commit-ments. These three countries are also vulnerable to low-level, hybrid, and full-scale attacks by Russian special operations and regular military forces deployed


    • The Politics of Ethnicity: Russians in the New Ukraine - JSTOR

      In the Baltics, ethnic Russians concerned by the prospects of new and potentially discriminatory national regimes organised an 'international front' to preserve all ties with the Soviet Union. In Moldova, compactly settled Russians went even further, announcing a breakaway Dniester Republic and launching concerted


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