Is There More Hope or More Fear Among Russia’s Exiled Activists After the August 2024 Prisoner Swap? View
‘Foreign Agent’ Laws in Georgia, Kyrgyzstan Show Pitfalls of Turning Local Governance Issues into Geopolitical Battles View
Publisher: Lexington Books Buy It Now – Link: Photo: Secondary Author: Andrey Makarychev and Alexandra Yatsyk Previous Article Recommended | Рекомендуем Critical Biopolitics of the Post-Soviet From Populations to Nations [NEW BOOK] November 25, 2019Alexandra Yatsyk View Next Article Recommended | Рекомендуем Marat: This is what peaceful resistance against corrupt government looks like in Central Asia. No signs of provocateurs, no arrests, and a self-organized public November 26, 2019PONARS Eurasia View You May Also Like View Policy Memos | Аналитика Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized Where’s Wagner Now? One Year after the Mutiny Kimberly MartenJune 21, 2024 View Policy Memos | Аналитика Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized Anchored in Freedom: Ukrainians’ Will to Fight Back in Harder Times Mikhail Alexseev and Serhii DembitskyiJune 20, 2024 View Policy Memos | Аналитика Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized The War in Ukraine and Changing Perceptions of Russia in Azerbaijan Anar Valiyev and Fidan NazamovaJune 3, 2024 View Uncategorized Cossacks Plan for February Meeting Richard ArnoldJanuary 15, 2024 View Uncategorized Cossack Warriors From Russia and Abroad Meet in Moscow Richard ArnoldNovember 3, 2023 View Uncategorized ASEEES e-Brochures PONARS EurasiaAugust 29, 2023 View Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized The Evolving Concerns of Russians after the Invasion | New Voices on Eurasia with Sasha de Vogel (March 9) PONARS EurasiaMarch 5, 2023 View Policy Memos | Аналитика Uncategorized Contentious Cities: Urban Conflicts in Russian Millionniks Andrei SemenovJune 2, 2022
Previous Article Recommended | Рекомендуем Critical Biopolitics of the Post-Soviet From Populations to Nations [NEW BOOK] November 25, 2019Alexandra Yatsyk View
Next Article Recommended | Рекомендуем Marat: This is what peaceful resistance against corrupt government looks like in Central Asia. No signs of provocateurs, no arrests, and a self-organized public November 26, 2019PONARS Eurasia View
View Policy Memos | Аналитика Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized Where’s Wagner Now? One Year after the Mutiny Kimberly MartenJune 21, 2024
View Policy Memos | Аналитика Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized Anchored in Freedom: Ukrainians’ Will to Fight Back in Harder Times Mikhail Alexseev and Serhii DembitskyiJune 20, 2024
View Policy Memos | Аналитика Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized The War in Ukraine and Changing Perceptions of Russia in Azerbaijan Anar Valiyev and Fidan NazamovaJune 3, 2024
View Uncategorized Cossack Warriors From Russia and Abroad Meet in Moscow Richard ArnoldNovember 3, 2023
View Recommended | Рекомендуем Uncategorized The Evolving Concerns of Russians after the Invasion | New Voices on Eurasia with Sasha de Vogel (March 9) PONARS EurasiaMarch 5, 2023
View Policy Memos | Аналитика Uncategorized Contentious Cities: Urban Conflicts in Russian Millionniks Andrei SemenovJune 2, 2022