Srl | Item |
1 |
ID:
150337
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Summary/Abstract |
“The fundamental dilemma in Ukraine’s decommunization process is how to undo the legal, institutional, and historical legacy of the Soviet era without repeating the Soviet approach of mandating one ‘correct’ interpretation of the past…”
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2 |
ID:
148168
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Summary/Abstract |
“[S]ending countries can certainly do more, such as increase human capital investments, strengthen networks that increase the development value of diasporas, reduce barriers to return and circulation, and, above all, create an environment to attract and retain talent.”
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3 |
ID:
148167
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Summary/Abstract |
[D]iaspora politics can be viewed as not only enhancing or challenging state power in particular cases, but also contributing to new forms of global identity politics that transcend state institutions.”
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4 |
ID:
148172
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Summary/Abstract |
The kind of support refugees receive to help them deal with the stresses of displacement can determine whether they will be a constructive or a divisive force.
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5 |
ID:
148169
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Summary/Abstract |
“The disadvantages faced by Mexican migrants, the challenges of their integration into US society, and the question of the rights due to noncitizens are at the core of the immigration debate in the United States.”
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6 |
ID:
148171
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Summary/Abstract |
“[T]he main religious traditions all share references to journeys and emigration experiences as metaphors for the human condition.”
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7 |
ID:
148170
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Summary/Abstract |
[F]or the first time in modern history, a rising China is shaping the relationship, transforming the diaspora’s identity...”
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8 |
ID:
150339
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Summary/Abstract |
"While Soviet efforts to promote gender equality are not openly celebrated, the idea planted in the region during that now-disdained era—that men and women should be equal under the law—is still holding fast.”
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9 |
ID:
150340
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Summary/Abstract |
Ankara is cozying up to Moscow in a momentary fit of pique with the West, but economic and security realities make it likely that Turkey will stay in NATO’s camp.
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10 |
ID:
150336
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Summary/Abstract |
“Moscow may not be very good at learning lessons from setbacks, and certainly tends to exaggerate its successes, but it has few doubts about the feasibility of ‘military solutions’ and
even fewer reservations about reaching for them.”
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11 |
ID:
150338
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Summary/Abstract |
“Workers form the exemplary class of economic, social, and psychological ‘losers’ of the postcommunist transition.” Second in a series on labor relations around the world.
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