From the category archives:

Post-Soviet Web

Hello world. I apologize for not posting any articles for a while. So I thought that it would be good to re-start posting with some interesting material on global energy, security and geopolitics that greatly influence many important decisions in our rather turbulent times. Not long ago, on April 15, 2008, the Center for US-Ukrainian [...]

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Uzbekistan Report-2007

by Islander on March 21, 2008

So, you want to graduate from a college in Uzbekistan? First, pass “Karimov Studies” class! Academic freedom issues The government limited academic freedom. Authorities often required department head approval for university lectures or lecture notes. Although authorities implemented the requirement inconsistently, university professors generally practiced self-censorship. Numerous university students reported that universities taught mandatory courses [...]

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Tajikistan Report-2007

by Islander on March 21, 2008

Academic freedom issues There were no reported government restrictions on academic freedom and cultural events.I find it hard to believe that there are no restrictions. Considering that Tajikistan is an isolated country without any international monitor groups or truly independent media it would be safe to assume that if there are any incidents they simply [...]

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Turkmenistan Report-2007

by Islander on March 21, 2008

Here is an interesting twist, apparently, former President Niyazov’s poetry works are still necessary to learn in order to graduate in Turkmenistan. I am suprised that President Lukashenko didn’t follow the trend…yet. Academic freedom issues No master’s degrees or doctorates have been granted in the country since 1998. Government permission was required to study abroad [...]

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Ukraine Report-2007

by Islander on March 21, 2008

Here is the same summary, notable is a number of hate crimes that took place. Academic freedom issues The government did not restrict academic freedom, but academic freedom was an underdeveloped and poorly understood concept. Most major universities were state owned; while university rectors had a degree of autonomy; curriculum and degree standards were tightly [...]

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Russia Report-2007

by Islander on March 21, 2008

Just like in a previous post, here is some selected topics from the Human Rights Report published by the US Department of State. Academic freedom issues According to the report published by the U.S. Department of State the government did not restrict academic freedom; however, human rights and academic organizations questioned whether the convictions of [...]

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Belarus Report-2007

by Islander on March 21, 2008

The US Dpartment of State released its Human Rights Report for 2007. Below is a summary of some issues. By no means it is a detailed summary, however, as soon as I get more time all topics will be updated and expanded. Academic freedom issues: The government restricted academic freedom, in part by requiring educational [...]

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Oh, that lovely breath of the warm Black Sea. Unmatched nightlife. Crazy prices for the housing, quality of which would give a birth to an inexpressible confusion to anybody who ever cared about the difference between one-, two- and minus 5 star hotels. (By the way, there, in the place we are talking about, small [...]

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Gorbachev Reflects On The Coup

by Islander on August 20, 2006

PRAGUE, August 18, 2006 (RFE/RL) –Fifteen years after the failed coup that triggered the collapse of the Soviet Union and transformed his own life, former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev talks to RFE/RL’s North Caucasus Service about the events of August 1991 and their legacy. RFE/RL: In his annual address to the Federal Assembly in 2005, [...]

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