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KIEV (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   174053


Can Germany Become a Major Ally of Ukraine? Counterintuitive Deliberations on a Coming Partnership between Kyiv and Berlin / Umland, Andreas   Journal Article
Umland, Andreas Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Over the last few years, intergovernmental affairs and the roles of individual countries within the West have started to shift. In response, Kyiv (Kiev) should reorder the priorities and emphases of its foreign political, economic, and cultural policies. The central focus of this re-orientation should be more resolute than the hitherto deepening of Ukrainian relations has been, not only with the German government but also with the broader political elite, industrial companies, and the civil society of the Federal Republic. A recent systematic study of German perceptions of Ukraine can help develop new approaches, initiatives, and policies to reach a new level of German–Ukrainian partnership.
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2
ID:   107604


Counterrevolution in Kiev: hope fades for Ukraine / Menon, Rajan; Motyl, Alexander J   Journal Article
Menon, Rajan Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract President Viktor Yanukovych has led Ukraine, no stranger to crisis, into another round of turmoil. He has rolled back democracy while failing to take on corruption or take the country closer to Europe. Now, much of the public has turned against him -- and the country could be headed for more unrest.
Key Words Ukraine  Europe  Viktor Yanukovych  Kiev  Iran - Democracy - 1941-1953 
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3
ID:   137333


Insurrection in Kiev: the stage and the actors / Sagnol, Marc   Article
Sagnol, Marc Article
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Summary/Abstract FOR FIVE YEARS, Marc Sagnol headed the French Institute in Kiev; an expert in Germanic languages he also has excellent command of Russian, Polish and Ukrainian, to say nothing of Western tongues. The text offered here is a valuable evidence of the events which were unfolding in Kiev, including the insurrection. Thanks to his linguistic proficiency and knowledge of the country he could better grasp the meaning of what was unfolding before his eyes without prejudice and hasty conclusions. Having come to Kiev to make a film about Paul Celan* he never expected that, during his very short stay in the Ukrainian capital, the crisis would reach the boiling point. Anybody reading his article will inevitably see that Ukraine was not a country without a past and that the struggle for civil rights and democracy is a smokescreen for a revival of the old forces defeated in World War II but still very much alive. People familiar with my films know that the guards in Sobibór (and other concentration camps) were Ukrainians. This does not mean that the past lives indefinitely; it means that the naïveté with which the old good democrats ignore the depths of History and its wounds will bring bitter fruit.
Key Words European Union  Civil rights  Russia  Ukraine  Kiev 
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