81 - 90 z 161
OSW Studies |
| Jadwiga Rogoża
Moscow’s control over the regions is currently so thorough that it contradicts the formally existing federal form of government in Russia.
OSW Studies |
| Wojciech Górecki
Since the collapse of the USSR, Russian influence in Central Asia has undergone a far-reaching erosion. The process is unlikely to be reversed.
OSW Report |
The international development cooperation systems of the Visegrad countries are all rather new, in most cases only about a decade old.
OSW Studies |
| Wojciech Górecki
Considering the scale of violence in the North Caucasus, the conflict in the region should be regarded as a local civil war.
OSW Report |
| Konrad Popławski
The Eurozone crisis has forced German exporters to speed up their expansion onto the emerging markets, in particular Brazil, Russia, India and China
OSW Report |
| Józef Lang
Radical Islamic militants from Central Asia have ceased to be a local phenomenon. They have become a kind of ‘jihad academy’.
OSW Studies |
| Krzysztof Strachota, Aleksandra Jarosiewicz
The collapse of the USSR brought about conditions conducive to the dynamic development of relations between Central Asia and China. These relations have evolved from deep mistrust to the continually growing Chinese presence primarily in…
OSW Studies |
| Marek Menkiszak
On several occasions since 2001 Vladimir Putin has raised the concept of ‘Greater Europe’, a partly-integrated common space comprising mainly Russia and the European Union. In recent years Moscow has undertaken a number of initiatives…
OSW Studies |
| Iwona Wiśniewska
In 2009, Vladimir Putin, the then Russian prime minister, gave impetus to the establishment of closer relations within what was then a still narrow group of three countries: Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus. Close co-operation is expected to…
OSW Studies |
| Tadeusz A Olszański
Full version available only in Polish.