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2024, The Institute of Art and Ideas
With the war in Ukraine evolving into a protracted ground-based war of attrition, the true origins of the conflict remain contested. Undoubtedly Putin's will was the defining factor, but what motivated that will? And does the Russian imperial spirit have a deeper origin? The current conflict is a result of an unresolved Russian chauvinism that once provoked fear in the hearts of Soviet leadership.
Jacobin, 2022
The invasion of Ukraine is not simply a product of Vladimir Putin’s expansionist mindset. It corresponds to a project for Russian capitalism that he and his allies have pursued since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
East/West: Journal of Ukrainian Studies
Przegląd Politologiczny/ Political Science Review vol. 2 , 2023
As time passed, in Russian political thought after the collapse of the Soviet Union, militarism or even an apology for war came to the fore. The aim of the study was to detect the most important models of this trend, taking into account the timeline of the Crimean events in 2014, and to attempt to explain its background in the absence of significant military threats to Russia from the international environment. Four main models of post-Soviet militarism have been distinguished: a) the rational model, pointing to the effects of military action in the modern world; b) the dualistic model of a clash between the traditionalist Russian civilization and the corrupt and expansionist West; c) the fatalistic concept of war as an inevitable aspect of the maturation of societies; d/the revivalist model, where war is treated as a device of social mobilization.
Kungl. Krigsvetenskapsakademiens Handlingar och Tidskrift, 2019
Harvard Ukrainian Studies, 2018
A static or a dynamic world view leads to radically different interpretations of the logic behind Russia's international-political behaviour.
ASSRJ, 2022
The aim of this article is to analyze the recent Russian behavior from a historical, cultural and psychological perspective in the attempt to better understand the sudden shift from a western oriented policy to the rejection of the West and the shift toward the East. In the West, progress has been conceived as a process of controlled linear change in the hope to develop and improve prosperity and wellbeing along the arrow of time. On the other hand, any change has been always conceived as an eschatological overturning in Russia, where the previous condition is radically refused and the new one is the result of its turn upside down. On psychological standpoint, this dual structure seems to depend on proneness to splitting and inability to integrate the opposites-a behavior similar to primary defense mechanisms of the infants that may persist in adult life. The Russian psychocultural inclination to a dual axiological structure also is in line with the dualist Orthodox religious belief, contemplating only heaven and hell and denying purgatory. The above century-old dual structure of Russian mentality is also compatible with Putin's dual behavior, initially reproaching the West and then radically refusing it as a sort of absolute evil.
International Critical Thought, 2023
With Russia's attack on Ukraine the decline of the imperialist rule of the United States and its subordinate allies has accelerated, while the emergence of a multipolar world draws nearer. The author first describes how the structure, toolkit, inherent contradictions of imperialism, as well as the role of fascism, have altered in the last century, then explains the challenges imperialism faces today. This is followed by a discussion of the reasons for the Ukrainian war and the unhuman reactions of the North Atlantic powers. The author argues that only the defeat of imperialism and the emergence of a multipolar world will open the road to socialism at global level.
Studies in East European Thought 2022, vol. 74, nr 4
Is Russia a neoimperial or postimperial state? In this paper, I compare two interpretations proposed by political commentators Marcel Van Herpen and Dmitri Trenin. Van Herpen holds that the Russian empire is literally being rebuilt, whereas Trenin believes that Russia is just ceasing to be an empire. I argue that, contrary to popular belief, the current war against Ukraine cannot be interpreted as an attempt to restore the Russian empire. This is because being an empire requires a universalistic ideology that can be accepted by other nations. Meanwhile, the ideological foundation of the current war is an obviously nationalistic conception of the "Russian world." Polish historians Andrzej Nowak and Włodzimierz Marciniak brilliantly argued that it was Russian nationalism that had previously led to the collapse of both Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union. Under this interpretation the current war in Ukraine can be seen not as the rebirth but rather as the dramatic end of Russian imperialism.
These reflections will focus on two main aspects, one is the continuity of Russian doctrine and historical policy from the late fifteenth century to the present days; the other a composition of place with a perspective to understand the territorial scenario in which the war takes place. These two approaches or perspectives permanently intersect in the chronological line, giving rise to influences and feedback that make the analysis complex, projected from the past to understand the present. Starting from the most recent events, references will be made to various historical moments, further away or closer, in order to string together the genesis of the events and unravel the underlying motives, and which account for the movements of Russia in the 21st century, in continuity with its postulates and doctrine since the XV century. The historical review is conducive in these circumstances in order to recompose the truth that has been distorted by the tsarist and Bolshevik versions, and that persist to this day, obscuring the understanding of events.
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Academia Biology, 2024
Fluxos de Caixa e Análises de Investimentos - Rafael Vianna, 2024
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