97,746 results on '"eastern europe"'
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2. Emerging Europe Monitor.
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ECONOMIC development ,POLITICAL risk (Foreign investments) - Abstract
A country report for South East Europe is presented from publisher BMI, a Fitch Solutions Company with topics including economic growth, country risk scores, and political structure.
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- 2024
3. LEADERSHIP. DECISION-MAKING. LEGITIMACY. HOW DELIBERATIVE ARE THE LABOR UNIONS IN ROMANIA?
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Cosma, Diana Cristina and Miscoiu, Sergiu
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Political parties -- United Kingdom -- Eastern Europe -- Western Europe -- Romania ,Decision-making ,Communism -- Romania -- Eastern Europe -- Western Europe -- United Kingdom ,Democracy -- Romania -- Eastern Europe -- Western Europe -- United Kingdom ,Social sciences ,European Union - Abstract
Deliberative democracy theory highlighted democratic deliberation as a modus operandi for facilitating group decision-making. In 2023, members of Romanian labor unions in several sectors took to the streets in strikes and protests, demanding higher revenues and better work conditions. Nevertheless, misunderstandings and internal ruptures shadowed their noble ends and fueled mistrust amongst unionists. This dynamic reminds rather of interest party politics as it employs vertical power relations, influenced by social and professional background segmentation. One question that reasonably arises in this context is how deliberative the decision-making process is within the unions in Romania. We specifically analyze elements of deliberative organizational leadership and the power relations within labor unions through a qualitative study in the form of interviews. Keywords: Labor Unions, Romania, Deliberation, Representation, Leadership, Context Neo-liberalism triggered more dynamism in the labor market and new work relations, forcing unions to reshape and adjust their working procedures repeatedly. Their efficiency in coping with capitalist interests [...]
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- 2024
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4. YUGONOSTALGIA, CULTURAL YUGOSPHERE AND MEMORY OF/FOR THE FUTURE/YOUGONOSTALGIE, YOUGOSPHERE CULTURELLE ET MEMO IRE DE/POUR L'AVENIR
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Iorga, Alina
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Oxford University Press (Oxford, England) ,Memory ,Book publishing ,Mediation ,Social sciences - Abstract
By counterbalancing the instrumentalization of the ethno-nationalist restorative nostalgia--which was not only the affective and imaginary fuel of the mnemonic wars fought, starting from the 80s, on the territory of 'the country that no longer exists', but also that of both the subsequent tragedies and cultural-political polarizations--, Yugonostalgia emerged in the painful 90s as a privileged form of post-Yugoslav mnemonic imagination. Against the background of the persistent mnemonic conflicts within the region, the multidirectional/ agonistic Yugonostalgic memory appears nowadays as a catalyst of the emotional and ethical commitment with the recent past, particularly able to inspire 'visions of a better future'. Keywords: Yugonostalgia, multidirectional/ agonistic memory, retrospective utopia, post-Yugoslav divided memories, retrotopia, Introduction Yugoslavia [...] became a prohibited word, and the terms Yugoslav, Yugonostalgic or Yugo-zombie are synonymous with national traitor. (1) La reflexion citee, extraite de La culture du mensonge de [...]
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- 2024
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5. Seventies' Incidents Impacting Weapon System Acquisitions used in Desert Storm
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Ortensie, Ray
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United States. Department of Defense -- International economic relations ,United States. Senate. Committee on Armed Services -- International economic relations ,United States. Air Force. Systems Command -- International economic relations ,Hewlett-Packard Co. -- International economic relations ,General Electric Co. -- International economic relations ,General Dynamics Corp. -- International economic relations ,Northrop Grumman Corp. -- International economic relations ,Yom Kippur War, 1973 ,Aircraft industry -- International economic relations ,Computer industry -- International economic relations ,Electrical equipment and supplies industry -- International economic relations ,Microcomputer industry ,Computer industry ,Military and naval science - Abstract
Just before dawn on August 2, 1990, Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein deployed units of the Republic Guard Forces Command across the Kuwaiti border in a brutally swift assault that quickly [...]
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- 2024
6. Locked In: Reindustrialisation and the Production of Multiple Marginalities in an Old Mining Town of Hungary.
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Nagy, Erika, Bródy, Luca Sára, and Mihály, Melinda
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ETHNIC relations , *SOCIAL reproduction , *LOCAL history , *SOCIAL change , *INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
This paper aims to unfold how peripheral reindustrialisation in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) produced multiple marginalities in local spaces. Relying on a cultural political economic (CPE) approach, we analyse how the imaginary of reindustrialisation encompassed the discourses on development and the strategies and practices of powerful agents of economic restructuring in an old mining town of Hungary, which entailed new dimensions and depths of poverty. By discussing the changing labour, housing, and environmental conditions of the local poor, we relate structural changes to the changing conditions of social reproduction and local history, and highlight how the new economic trajectory produced marginalised spaces within a dynamic region. In this way, we also extend CPE‐guided research more to the realms of social reproduction and ethnic social relations to get a more fine‐grained understanding of inequalities rooted in peripheral industrialisation and scrutinise prevailing narratives of economic development in CEE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Lithuanian economy, 1919–1940: stagnant but resilient. The first inter-war GDP time-series estimates and their implications.
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Klimantas, Adomas
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GREAT Depression, 1929-1939 ,NATIONAL account systems ,NATIONAL income accounting ,TIME series analysis ,AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Copyright of Scandinavian Economic History Review is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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8. Who would never grant them equal rights? A comparative analysis of welfare chauvinism in Central and Eastern Europe.
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Bell, David Andreas and Valenta, Marko
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IMMIGRANTS ,ETHNOCENTRISM ,EMPIRICAL research ,CENTRAL Europeans ,HUMAN rights ,SOCIAL attitudes ,PUBLIC welfare ,PRACTICAL politics ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Social Work is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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9. Transnational socialist encounters in the Second Socialist World: the case of the Chilean Museum of Solidarity.
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Preda, Caterina
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SOCIALISTS ,CULTURAL studies ,INTERDISCIPLINARY education ,CULTURAL relations - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Latin American & Caribbean Studies (Routledge) is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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10. Diachronic Height Changes in Europe From the Mesolithic to the Present: Exploring Possible Causes and Regional Specificities.
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Negasheva, Marina A., Fedorchuk, Olga A., Khafizova, Ainur A., and Movsesian, Alla A.
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MIDDLE Ages , *INDUSTRIAL revolution , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *NINETEENTH century , *TWENTY-first century - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objectives Materials and Methods Results Conclusions A meta‐analysis of diachronic changes in average height across Europe from the Mesolithic to the present, based on a broad range of literature sources.The analysis of chronological height variability was based on skeletal remains (from the Mesolithic to the 19th century), from which height was reconstructed, and on data from living individuals measured from the late 19th to the early 21st century. In total, data from 73 skeletal series and 342 groups of modern populations, primarily from Eastern Europe, were analyzed. A regression analysis was performed using R to describe the patterns of variability.The findings indicate that height decreases during the Neolithic and remains relatively stable until the Medieval period. A decline in average height is observed during the High Medieval period. The Early Modern period marks a transition to the 20th century, during which there is a consistent increase in average height, most pronounced until the 1980s, after which the rate of increase slows slightly into the early 21st century. Temporal height variability in the European part of Russia shows regional differences.The results suggest a wave‐like pattern of trans‐epochal changes in the somatic status of populations over an extended period, likely driven by various socioeconomic factors that dominated in different historical periods: the transition to agriculture, urbanization, political systems, industrial revolutions, and significant improvements in quality of life. Diachronic changes in height exhibit regional specificities, reflected in the variability of rates and magnitudes of secular gains across different regions and time periods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Sustainability of opioid agonist therapy programmes in Belarus, the Republic of Moldova, Tajikistan and Ukraine in the context of transition from Global Fund support during 2020–2023.
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Stuikyte, Raminta, Varentsov, Ivan, Malikov, Naimdzhon, Dvoriak, Sergii, Filippovych, Myroslava, Latypov, Alisher, Kralko, Aleksei, Iatco, Ala, and Cook, Catherine
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PHARMACEUTICAL policy , *RECESSIONS , *QUALITY of service , *SUSTAINABLE development reporting , *HUMAN resources departments - Abstract
Background: Most national programmes of opioid agonist therapy (OAT) in Eastern Europe and Central Asia are at a critical juncture for building their sustainability due to decreasing support from the Global Fund and other international HIV funders. Therefore, it is timely to identify the status, trends, opportunities and risk factors of OAT preparedness in the face of donor transition. Methods: The study assessed the OAT sustainability progress in 4 countries: Belarus, the Republic of Moldova, Tajikistan and Ukraine. The study used a comparative country case study design with qualitative methods and two data points in 2020 and 2022–2023. In total, 363 sources were reviewed and used, 83 interviews with key informants and 13 focus groups were conducted with clients, using a joint methodology and a defined Framework with three dimensions: 'Policy & Governance'; 'Finance & Resources'; and, 'Services'. Results: All four countries have made improvements to increase OAT sustainability, though it varied. In 2022, Ukraine had a substantial degree of sustainability, followed by Belarus and Moldova with a moderate degree, while Tajikistan's sustainability was at moderate-to-high risk. No country achieved a high degree of OAT sustainability in any of the three dimensions measured. However, a high degree of sustainability was reported for at least one indicator in Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine: 'Medicines'; 'Financial resources'; 'Evidence and information systems'; 'Service Accessibility'; or, 'Service integration & quality'. On average, the greatest improvement between 2020 and 2022 was seen for 'Availability & coverage'; 'Financial resources'; 'Service quality & integration'; and, 'Service accessibility'. The highest risks across the countries, notably in Belarus and Tajikistan, were recorded for the indicator, 'Availability and coverage'. Of concern is that the least progress, or even a decline, was found in 'Human resources'. Conclusions: OAT sustainability in the 4 analysed countries remains at risk, despite progress in all countries. Managing HIV donor transition can have positive effects in addressing financial sustainability, especially inspired by Ukraine's continued progress despite economic contraction and Russia's invasion. More attention is needed to non-financial aspects of OAT sustainability in donor transition planning. The directions that could have multifaceted positive influence for OAT long-term resilience and scale up for impact on drug problems include decentralisation outside of health settings and broader drug treatment financial and management transformation, together with drug policy reforms. Thus far, viable solutions for sustainability of OAT in conflict areas appear unlikely. Building OAT resilience should remain high on the agenda of national stakeholders, technical partners and donors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Directions of change in spatial planning systems in Central and Eastern Europe after 1989.
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Nowak, Maciej J., Mitrea, Andrei, Lukstiņa, Gunta, Jukneliene, Daiva, Jürgenson, Evelin, Filepné Kovács, Krisztina, Ladzianska, Zuzana, Maruniak, Eugenia, Palekha, Yuriy, Petrişor, Alexandru-Ionuţ, Põdra, Kätlin, Przedańska, Justyna, Sârbu, Cătălin Niculae, Simeonova, Velislava, Valciukiene, Jolanta, Yanchev, Pavel, and Blaszke, Małgorzata
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SPATIAL systems , *STATUS (Law) , *RURAL planning , *COMMUNISM , *COUNTRIES - Abstract
The aim of this article is to examine the main changes in spatial planning systems in Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries after the end of communism in 1989, and to relate these changes to the main challenges facing spatial planning in these countries. The authors used the following countries as case studies: Bulgaria, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Ukraine. They analysed the framework conditions, such as the main spatial planning instruments and the main planning legislation. They then looked at the rationale behind each country’s planning legislation and examined the legal status before implementation. This allowed them to identify the main directions of significant legal changes in each country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. How likely are Eastern European and central Asian countries to achieve global NCD targets: multi-country analysis.
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Dumcheva, Anastasiya, Nevalainen, Jaakko, Laatikainen, Tiina, and Nuorti, Pekka
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EARLY death , *GLOBAL burden of disease , *DEATH forecasting , *NON-communicable diseases , *DEATH rate - Abstract
Background: In Europe, mortality rates from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) among persons 30–69 years of age ("NCD premature mortality rates") have declined significantly, except in twelve countries of Eastern Europe and Central Asia, namely Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan. Data on long-term trends in NCD mortality in these countries are limited. We analyzed NCD premature mortality rates, identified change points in NCD mortality trends and forecasted how likely countries are to achieve the global NCD targets, stratified by gender and NCD type. Methods: We used the 1990–2019 Global Burden of Disease database to analyze NCD trends and identified country-specific change points by using piecewise linear regression. We assessed the likelihood of achieving the global targets for reducing NCD premature mortality rates among persons 30–69 years of age from four NCDs: cancers, diabetes, cardiovascular and chronic respiratory diseases. The global NCD targets are 25% reduction in mortality from 2010 to 2025 (WHO 25X25 target) and 33%—from 2015 to 2030 (SDG 3.4.1). We applied the analysis to both genders and four NCDs. Results: Only Kazakhstan and Russia are likely to achieve the global NCD targets. For Kazakhstan, WHO 25X25 and SDG 3.4.1 global targets for mortality rates were 494.3 and 374.8 per 100,000 population respectively; the corresponding predicted values (PVs) were 360.6 [CI 260.1–461.1] and 245.1 [CI 113.4–376.8]. For Russia, WHO 25X25 and SDG 3.4.1 global targets were 560.5 and 442.8 per 100,000 population respectively; the corresponding PVs were 427.7 [CI 270.3–585.1] and 311.0 [CI 102.8–519.1]. Achieving NCD global targets is less likely for Kyrgyzstan, while it is unlikely for the rest of countries. Most countries had higher mortality rates and slower progress among men compared with women. The likelihood of achieving overall global NCD targets was mainly explained by reduction in cardiovascular mortality. Conclusions: In most Eastern Europe and Central Asia countries, progress towards achieving NCD global targets is slow, or there's a reverse trend. Further quantitative and qualitative research is needed to understand the underlying reasons. Separate indicators are needed to monitor trends for cancers, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Interdependencies between international innovation partnerships: the case of Central and Eastern Europe.
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Bašić, Maja, Vlajčić, Davor, and Grgić, Gorana
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BUSINESS partnerships , *IMPULSE response , *PATENT applications , *PATENT databases , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation , *PATENTS - Abstract
Purpose: Competitively multipolar international system demands bilateral and multilateral partnerships. Joint innovation signals close partnerships. Regional proximity of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) to the European Union (EU) defines its research and development objectives. These objectives are additionally subjected to the USA's geopolitical strategy in this geographical area. Hence, CEE's limited resources require limited resources make international innovation cooperation. This paper aims to analyse whether and how CEE countries make international innovation cooperation decisions. Design/methodology/approach: This paper used Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) database of total patent applications filed to the patent cooperation treaty (PCT) with co-applicants from abroad, where co-patents with at least one foreign inventor present a measure of international innovation partnership. A vector autoregression analysis and impulse response function were used to analyse international innovation partnership choices of eight CEE OECD countries for the period 1990–2018. Findings: Innovation with the EU is of collaborative nature, commonly displaying complementary properties with the rest of the examined innovation partners, while co-patenting with the Russia and China act as substitutes or complements. Co-patenting with Russia is the most versatile, displaying both properties of collaboration and competition. Some countries exhibit complementarity in co-patenting activities with multiple partners. The significance levels of these relationships vary, indicating varying degrees of impact. Overall, these findings highlight the complex dynamics of co-patenting activities and the influence of different partners on countries' collaborative innovation strategies. Research limitations/implications: In addition to significant relationships, insignificant relationships as well as those that could bring about greater synergy are flagged in the paper. Those relationships portray possible direction into which national funds could be channelled to incite cooperation between different sectors and countries, especially as innovation partnerships are not always successful and require a long time period to materialise. Originality/value: By examining bilateral innovation partnerships, this study provides an insight into the strategic political and economic spheres of influence in the CEE region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Locating the State: Between Region and History.
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Brandel, Andrew, Adorján, István, and Randeria, Shalini
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STATE power , *POLITICAL science , *STATE capitalism , *ANTHROPOLOGISTS , *SOVEREIGNTY - Abstract
If anthropology once concerned itself with politics in stateless societies outside Euro-America over and against prevailing Euro-American political theory, today anthropologists see the state at work everywhere. Anthropologists have sought to trouble spatial metaphors of state power that assumed, among other things, its centralization and the unitary character of sovereignty. Locating the state through an attendant question of region, we explore recent literatures on everyday state practices in Central and Eastern Europe and South Asia to show how different regional histories and configurations of knowledge continue to structure our assumptions about the state and its functions as well as the grammar of our descriptions. We suggest that the state could prove to be a useful optic for the study of region, which provides an alternative to an overly rigid local/global dichotomy that continues to shadow our theorizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Temporal trends in inpatient care use for adult mental disorders in Czechia: a nationwide register-based study from 1994 to 2015.
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Potočár, Libor, Winkler, Petr, Mohr, Pavel, and Formánek, Tomáš
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TRANSITION to adulthood , *TEENAGE boys , *INPATIENT care , *PSYCHIATRIC hospital care , *MENTAL illness , *PSYCHIATRIC hospitals - Abstract
Purpose: To describe temporal trends in inpatient care use for adult mental disorders in Czechia from 1994 until 2015. Methods: Data from the nationwide register of inpatient care use and yearly census data were used to calculate (a) yearly admissions rates, (b) median length of stay, and (c) standardized inpatient-years for adult mental disorders (ICD-10 codes F0-F6] or G30). Segmented regressions were used to analyze age- and sex-specific temporal trends. Results: Admission rates were increasing in adults (average annual percent change = 0.51; 95% confidence interval = 0.16 to 0.86 for females and 1.01; 0.63 to 1.40 for males) and adolescents and emerging adults (3.27; 2.57 to 3.97 for females and 2.98; 2.08 to 3.88 for males), whereas in seniors, the trend was stable (1.22; -0.31 to 2.73 for females and 1.35; -0.30 to 2.98 for males). The median length of stay for studied mental disorders decreased across all age and sex strata except for a stable trend in male adolescents and emerging adults (-0.96; -2.02 to 0.10). Standardized inpatient-years were decreasing in adults of both sexes (-0.85; -1.42 to -0.28 for females and -0.87; -1.19 to -0.56 for males), increasing in female adolescents and emerging adults (0.95; 0.42 to 1.47), and stable in the remaining strata. Conclusion: Psychiatric hospital admissions were increasing or stable coupled with considerable reductions in median length of stay, suggesting that inpatient episodes for adult mental disorders have become more frequent and shorter over time. The overall psychiatric inpatient care use was decreasing or stable in adults and seniors, potentially implying a gradual shift away from hospital-based care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Trends in Gastric Cancer Mortality in Montenegro, 1990–2018: Joinpoint Regression.
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Nedović Vuković, Mirjana, Jakšić, Marina, Smolović, Brigita, Lukić, Miloš, and Bukumirić, Zoran
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POISSON distribution , *STOMACH tumors , *CANCER patient medical care , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MATHEMATICAL models , *THEORY , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Introduction: Gastric cancer (GC) remains a significant global public health problem, despite the decreasing trends in GC mortality rates in the last 5 decades. Our study aimed to examine the pattern of GC mortality in Montenegro between 1990 and 2018 and to contribute to the future by designing a national long-term strategy for the control and prevention of GC. Methods: Gastric cancer mortality data in Montenegro from 1990 to 2018 were collected. Mortality rates were age-standardized to the World Standard Population for estimating both the overall and gender-specific trends. The joinpoint regression model was used to assess GC mortality and identified significant changes in the linear time trend. Linear and Poisson regressions were also applied for additional trend analyses. Results: Joinpoint regression reveals a statistically significant decrease in the age-standardized rate for the overall level, on average by 1.4% per year (AAPC [95% IP] = −1.4 [−2.4 to −0.4]; p = 0.007), which was due to a decrease in the age-standardized rate in men with an average annual change of −1.8% (AAPC [95% IP] = −1.8 [−2.9 to −0.6]; p = 0.003), while in women the rates were stable (p = 0.565). The results for age groups indicate that a decline was registered at the overall level, and among men, as a consequence of the trend of decreasing age-specific rates for the age group 55–64 on average annually by 2% among men (AAPC [95% IP] = −2 [−3.8 to −0.1]; p = 0.035), and for the overall level (AAPC [95% IP] = −2 [−3.7 to −0.3]; p = 0.026). Conclusion: Our findings indicate a noteworthy decline in age-standardized overall GC mortality rates among men in Montenegro, while rates for women have remained constant. National strategies to further reduce mortality rates for GC are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. A Comparison of Preferred Leader Behaviors in Slavic Countries: Three Tribes and Seven Nations.
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Ljubica, Jasenko, Rahimić, Zijada, Szymanski, Michal, Lorencová, Hana, and Čalopa, Marina Klačmer
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MANAGEMENT styles , *CORPORATE culture , *LEADERSHIP , *CULTURAL values , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SOCIAL skills , *EAST Europeans , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to examine and compare the employee preferences for explicit leader behaviors within and across seven Slavic countries, belonging to three Slavic tribes. Our analyses of data obtained from 2542 participants revealed several patterns of similarities in volume and distribution as well as magnitude and structure of these preferences between and within the participating nations, their regions and tribes. The differences, however, are inconsistent. We contribute to the "Black Box" of cross-cultural leadership literature and hope to stimulate further research demystifying and facilitating leadership research and practice in these astonishing nations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Opening the Black Box: Editorial to the "Culture and Leadership in Slavic Nations" Special Issue in the Cross-Cultural Research Journal.
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Ljubica, Jasenko and Littrell, Romie F.
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SERIAL publications , *LEADERSHIP , *CULTURAL values , *BUSINESS , *SOCIAL values , *QUALITY assurance - Abstract
This Special Issue is an installment of the series of studies carried out by the Centre for Cross Cultural Comparisons ([https://crossculturalcentre.homestead.com/](https://crossculturalcentre.homestead.com/)), an international voluntary association of researchers, students and practitioners interested in the global study of culture and leadership. This Consortium investigates the relationships among preferred leader behavior dimensions and societal cultural values of employed businesspeople across the globe, with the intent of improving managerial leadership practice in businesses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Societal Culture in Slavic Nations: Effects of Historical Events.
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Ljubica, Jasenko, Littrell, Romie F., and Pubalova, Katerina
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CULTURE , *LEADERSHIP , *CULTURAL values , *PRACTICAL politics , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CULTURAL pluralism , *HISTORY - Abstract
Slavic-heritage countries have a rich and diverse culture shaped by a variety of historical and geopolitical events. Utilizing Hofstede´s Value Survey Module 2008, we study the cultural values of the Slavs, indicating the way businesspeople (employees) and businesses function in these societies. The results of our analyses of data from seven Slavic countries show that the volume and distribution of differences in cultural values is mostly inconsistent, however, several patterns emerged. The magnitude and structure of these differences indicate an influx of values originating from the global West, however, with variations across the tribes, nations and their culture areas. We contribute to the cross-cultural management and leadership literature with this pioneering, systematic comparison, and outline directions for future research to foster a clear(er) understanding thereof, hence, to develop valuable practical guidelines for (international) business professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. DISORIENTING EASTERN EUROPE: JUDITH HERMANN'S AFFECTIVE GEOGRAPHY.
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Gordinsky, Natasha
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GEOCRITICISM , *GEOPOLITICS , *SHORT story (Literary form) - Abstract
This article presents a geocritical interpretation (based on the methodological approach developed by Robert Tally) of two of Judith Hermann's short stories – 'Diesseits der Oder' and 'Osten'. Written almost twenty years apart, the first of these takes place amidst the Oderbruch, whilst the second comprises Hermann's only literary text about a journey to Ukraine. Drawing on interdisciplinary spatial research, I offer a close reading of both stories as they stage, in different ways, an affective experience of East European space. Moreover, I argue that through her critical investigation of the 'East' as an imagined and real space, Hermann emerges as a geocritic herself. Drawing on Sara Ahmed's queer phenomenology and Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht's notion of latency in post‐war culture, I contend that 'Diesseits der Oder' and 'Osten' are constituted as poetic texts that foreground disorientation through the mode of latency as a crucial phenomenological device. Once brought together into their historical and geopolitical contexts and explored through the aesthetic prism of representation of the 'East', Hermann's short stories are seen to advance a radical critique of perceptions of Eastern Europe in the German post‐war literary and geographic imagination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. THE FUTURE OF LIBERAL WORLD ORDER FROM A CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVE.
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Rada, Peter and Nyilas, Laura
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INTERNATIONAL relations theory ,INTERNATIONAL organization ,LANDSCAPE changes ,LIBERALISM ,GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
Copyright of Revista UNISCI is the property of Unidad de Investigaciones Sobre Seguridad y Cooperacion International (UNISCI) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Global, regional, and national burdens of HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission 1990-2019: an observational study.
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Xinsheng Wu, Xinyi Zhou, Yuanyi Chen, Yi-Fan Lin, Yuwei Li, Leiwen Fu, Qi Liu, and Huachun Zou
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Background. Sexual transmission accounts for a substantial proportion of HIV infections. Although some countries are experiencing an upward trend in HIV infections, there has been a lack of studies assessing the global burden of HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission. We assessed the global, regional, and national burdens of HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission from 1990 to 2019. Methods. Data on deaths, years of life lost (YLLs), years lived with disability (YLDs), and disability-adjusted life years (DALY) of HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission in 204 countries and territories from 1990 to 2019 were retrieved from the Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD) 2019. The burdens and trends were evaluated using the age-standardised rates (ASR) and estimated annual percentage change (EAPC). Results. Globally, HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission accounted for ~695.8 thousand (95% uncertainty interval 628.0-811.3) deaths, 33.0 million (28.7-39.9) YLLs, 3.4 million (2.4-4.6) YLDs, and 36.4 million (32.2-43.1) DALYs in 2019. In 2019, Southern sub-Saharan Africa (11350.94), Eastern sub-Saharan Africa (3530.91), and Western sub-Saharan Africa (2037.74) had the highest ASR of DALYs of HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission per 100,000. In most regions of the world, the burden of HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission has been increasing from 1990 to 2019, mainly in Oceania (EAPC 17.20, 95% confidence interval 12.82-21.75), South Asia (9.00, 3.94-14.30), and Eastern Europe (7.09, 6.35-7.84). Conclusions. HIV/AIDS acquired through sexual transmission results in a major burden globally, regionally, and nationally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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24. Insights into the Rising Threat of Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacterales and Pseudomonas aeruginosa Epidemic Infections in Eastern Europe: A Systematic Literature Review.
- Author
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Piotrowski, Michal, Alekseeva, Irina, Arnet, Urs, and Yücel, Emre
- Abstract
Background: Antimicrobial resistance is a major global public health challenge, particularly with the rise of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (CRPA). This study aimed to describe the characteristics of CRE and CRPA infections in Eastern Europe, focusing on Bulgaria, Croatia, Czechia, Greece, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, and Slovenia. Methods: Following MOOSE and PRISMA guidelines, a systematic literature review of articles published between 1 November 2017 and 1 November 2023 was conducted using the MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, CDSR, DARE, and CENTRAL databases. The search strategy used a combination of free text and subject headings to gather pertinent literature regarding the incidence and treatment patterns of CRE and CRPA infections. A total of 104 studies focusing on infections in both children and adults were included in this review. Results: This review revealed a significant prevalence of carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative isolates and underscored the effectiveness of imipenem/relebactam and ceftazidime/avibactam (CAZ/AVI) against Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales and of ceftolozane/tazobactam, imipenem/relebactam and ceftazidime/avibactam against non-metallo-β-lactamase-producing CRPA strains. Conclusions: This study highlights the urgent need for comprehensive measures to combat the escalating threat of CRE and CRPA infections in Eastern European countries. At the same time, it shows the activity of the standard of care and new antimicrobials against carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative pathogens in Eastern Europe. Clinical real-world data on the treatment of carbapenem-resistant infections in Eastern Europe are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. On the Taxonomic Affinity of Davletkulia gigantea Ivachnenko.
- Author
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Bulanov, V. V.
- Abstract
The holotype (an isolated tooth) of the largest-known member of the family Bolosauridae, Davletkulia gigantea Ivachnenko, 1990, from the middle Permian Yaman-Yushatyr' locality, Orenburg Region, Russia, is reassigned to the herbivorous dinocephalians of the superfamily Tapinocephaloidea. This attribution is supported by the shape of the tooth crown and patterns of wear and resorption, as well as by the absence of reparative (tertiary) dentine inside the pulp cavity at the late stage of tooth functioning. The morphology of the holotype reveals that D. gigantea is a valid species and the third representative of the group after Ulemosaurus svijagensis and U. gigas, to be described from Eastern Europe. Judging from the Ocher age of the type locality, D. gigantea is the oldest-known tapinocephaloid known from the tetrapod assemblages of the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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26. The income effects of minority co-ethnic employment: the case of Hungarians in central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Csata, Zsombor, Péti, Márton, Compton, Betty, Liu, Amy H., and Sándor, Zsolt
- Subjects
- *
HUNGARIANS , *BUSINESS enterprises , *WAGE increases , *EMPLOYMENT of minorities - Abstract
What is the effect of minority co-ethnic employment on income? While the business organizations literature argues diversity allows for knowledge accumulation, optimal labour allocation, and efficient interactions, absent is any consideration of language – e.g. language competency or language ideology. We argue when co-ethnic minorities work together, this shared language allows for bounded trust to develop; it also ensures there are preference similarities – factors that can increase firm productivity and individual wages. Using survey data of minority Hungarians in three Central and Eastern European countries (Romania, Slovakia, and Serbia), we find (1) diversity has no positive effect on income; and in fact, (2) co-ethnic employment increases wages in Southern Slovakia and Vojvodina. Additionally, we confirm that co-ethnic employment is not happening simply because of demographics. Instead, with one exception, the proportion of Hungarians in the workplace is significantly higher than in the areas where these jobs are located – suggesting a strategic behaviour by minority Hungarians. The implication is not that we endorse homogeneous workplaces per se, but that we remain cognizant of how asymmetric linguistic competencies and the underlying linguistic ideologies can shape power hierarchies – thereby limiting the benefits of diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Geographies of race in Poland and Central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Balogun, Bolaji and Ohia-Nowak, Margaret Amaka
- Subjects
- *
RACE , *SPACE race , *COLONIZATION , *GEOGRAPHERS , *DECOLONIZATION - Abstract
This article is a discipline-defining agenda. It addresses the oversight of Geographies of race in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) and explores geography’s potential contributions to the unfolding debates around race, decolonisation, and whiteness. Geographies of race remain unmarked and therefore unchallenged within the field of geography in CEE. Consequently, geographers typically consider CEE as peripheral to the global racial discourses and possibly post-racial. By drawing on sociological, migration, historical, and anthropological approaches, particularly in Poland, the article emphasises the importance of geography in discussions around race, decolonisation, and whiteness. It considers the appeal of geographies of race to this “peripheral location” to demonstrate a shift in racial and colonial discourses. By bridging interdisciplinary approaches and challenging prevailing discourses, the article aims to broaden the scope of the geographies of race and foster a more inclusive and global understanding of race and colonisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Uncanny Babushka: Migration, aging and the search for a new sexual Self.
- Author
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Cvajner, Martina and Sciortino, Giuseppe
- Subjects
- *
RESIDENTIAL mobility , *GENDER inequality , *OLDER people , *SOCIAL boundaries , *SEXUAL minorities - Abstract
Geographical mobility may have a powerful influence on sexual change. The sexual dimension of migration has mostly been studied in reference to its role in shaping aspiration for mobility. It has been documented how the promise of an erotically desirable future plays often an important role in many migration subcultures. Mobility, moreover, has been recognized as one of the ways in which many types of sexual minorities have escaped repression or pursued greater autonomy. In this paper, we argue that the same phenomena may be observed in the migration of older people. For some mature persons, particularly women, migration provides an alternative to de-sexualization and stigmatization. In many of these cases, however, the subjective process of sexual change is triggered indirectly, and sometimes serendipitously, by the experience of geographical dislocation. In fact, the experience of re-sexualization may be utterly independent from any pre-emigration aspiration to change one's sexual Self. The paper – on the basis of two longitudinal research projects on the women pioneers of the Eastern European migration to Italy – explores the role played in their settlement by the discovery that, in the new environment, their age did not disqualify them from romance. The different reactions to these opportunities have created a strong differentiation among migratory trajectories. For the women pioneers who have decided to explore it, this unexpected lovescape has made possible to draw some crucial social boundaries and to trigger the birth of a distinctive sexual field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The North-South divide and everything that gets left out in-between: conceptualizing Central and Eastern Europe to explain its positioning on climate change.
- Author
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Drieschova, Alena
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change mitigation , *GLOBAL North-South divide , *ECONOMIC structure , *GOVERNMENT policy on climate change , *FOREIGN investments - Abstract
The North-South divide forms the central axis along which scholars study the contemporary global order. Yet many countries fall in-between the cracks of a world divided into core and periphery. This paper develops a structural account to understand the position of countries in this space of in-betweenness. The focus is on Central and Eastern Europe. I draw on already existing scholarship on liminalities, the varieties of capitalism and transition studies to argue that a liminal identity of in-betweenness goes hand-in-glove with a domestic logic of transitioning, as the state seeks to move somewhere else. Furthermore transitioning dynamics position the state in the semi-periphery, as the transition to the civilizational core requires capital and know-how from abroad. The resulting semi-peripheral position further underlines the liminal identity. The paper uses this apparatus to understand why CEE countries are typically climate change laggards within the EU. Their continuing liminal identity results in frustration over and resistance against the schooling tendencies of Brussels and Western European capitals. The dynamics of a sense of imposition of climate change mitigation policies stem from CEE's liminal positioning as apprentices, but the reasons for the perceived alienness of such policies are located in domestic societal dynamics, and CEE countries' economic structure. The specific political structures of communism and the communist transition have strengthened particularistic personal ties of friendship and family between individuals and the localities they live in, while simultaneously weakening general and abstract conceptions of the public good. Accordingly initiatives for preserving specific localities can be strong, but conceptions of protecting an abstract, global climate, are not well developed. Additionally, the material costs of protecting the climate are higher in post-communist economies due to their comparative advantage in resource and labour intensive industries, their reliance on foreign capital, and a lack of domestic innovations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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30. Post-neoliberal Populism in Latin America and Eastern Europe: Recognizing Family Resemblance.
- Author
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Binev, Binio S.
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL development , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORICITY , *WATERSHEDS , *NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
This article offers a novel conceptualization and dataset of post-neoliberal populism in contemporary Latin America and Eastern Europe. By drawing insights from structuralist theories, which understood populism as historically grounded in political economy developments, I critique dominant minimal definitions and propose a synthetic conceptual alternative for the analysis of multidimensional and dynamic challengers of the watershed neoliberal revolutions that both regions have undergone since the late twentieth century. To this end, I disaggregate populism's key dimensions of anti-establishment discourse, illiberal ideology, and strategic organization into functionally interactive attributes; justify post-neoliberal populism as a family resemblance category; and develop a roadmap for case selection and measurement. I then illustrate the empirical validity and theoretical relevance of my approach by assessing the magnitude of post-neoliberal populism in 198 national-level elections in 33 Latin American and Eastern European democracies and by identifying the decline of the traditional Left as its correlate in both regions. By focusing on conceptual unity and cross-regional parallels, the article demonstrates that, contrary to conventional misconceptions, a family resemblance categorization of contemporary populism not only facilitates empirically rigorous research, but also stimulates mid-range theorizing at the intersection of intra-regional specificity and more general historicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The spatial repercussions of Russia's war in Ukraine: Region(alism)s, borders, insecurities.
- Author
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Makarychev, Andrey and Dufy, Caroline
- Subjects
- *
WAR , *REGIONALISM (International organization) , *EUROPEANIZATION , *NATIONAL character , *INTERNATIONAL security - Abstract
Russia's war on Ukraine has generated a new chain of insecurities in Europe: energy and food crises, new migration flows from Ukraine, Belarus and Russia, military threats sharpened by Russia's invasion are triggering a spatial and territorial reshuffling of Europe's Eastern flank. In this context, regional dynamics within and across the Eastern frontiers of Europe have undergone a succession of path-breaking transformations ranging from overt support to the Ukrainian war effort to decoupling from the Russian economy and an unprecedented boost to expanding the European Union's security architecture. However, one of the most important effects of the war is the growing gap between two regional models which might be dubbed normative (Europeanization within the EU- and NATO-led European normative space) and post-colonial (exemplified by different Russia-centric projects within the post-Soviet space). The original contribution of this special issue is to address the conceptual connections between security, borders and national identity to discuss the evolving European landscape. While we do not explore the military side of the war, we focus on the nexus of (in)security and bordering practices to capture how a combination of geopolitical changes, economic dynamics and human dimensions of war has created new borders and reshaped existing ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Populist hyperpersonalization and politicization of foreign policy institutions.
- Author
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Özdamar, Özgür and Yanik, Lerna K
- Subjects
- *
RIGHT-wing populism , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *POLICY analysis , *SOVEREIGNTY - Abstract
This article explains how right-wing populist leaders in Hungary, Poland, Russia and Turkey have transformed their states' foreign policy institutions through personalization and politicization. We examine the transformation of foreign policy institutions in the four cases and make two contributions. First, we differentiate between disparate types of personalization by proposing the term 'hyperpersonalization'—populist leaders' reliance on security institutions in foreign policy decision-making—which distinguishes the populist transformation of foreign policy institutions in Russia and Turkey. We argue that lower levels and speed of autocratization lead to politicization combined with milder cases of personalization of the foreign policy bureaucracy, while higher levels and speed of autocratization lead to higher levels of personalization in the foreign policy institutions. Second, we lay out the steps and patterns of populist politicization and hyperpersonalization that bring 'deinstitutionalizing restructuring' to foreign policy institutions. As we illustrate, this deinstitutionalizing restructuring involves concurrent bureaucratic expansion and bureaucratic retrenchment. The process is accompanied by a populist narrative that this restructuring is done to realize the 'popular will' or to regain 'full sovereignty'. We conclude the article with the policy implications of this populist transformation of foreign policy institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Can the party family approach explain Polish partisan positions? A case study on the policy field of higher education in post-socialist Poland.
- Author
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Felde, Mareike zum
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *RIGHT-wing populism , *POLITICAL affiliation , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *POPULIST parties (Politics) , *COALITION governments - Abstract
Research on partisan positions on higher education policies has focused to date mainly on parties in sustained democratic regimes in Western Europe. This study compares these findings with Polish parties' positioning and investigates the extent to which parties' preferences in post-socialist Poland can be explained by their party family affiliations. Poland provides an interesting case because of its socialist heritage of strong government control in the higher education sector and the rather fluid party system with a comparatively large share of populist right parties. By means of a qualitative content analysis of 41 party manifestos from 1989–2019, partisan positions of Christian democratic, social democratic, liberal, agrarian, and populist right parties are categorized along the re-distributive and control dimension of higher education policies. While party families can explain Polish parties' positioning on the control dimension, there is a cross-party consensus to expand the sector and increase public funding due to strong popular demand after the transformation which contrasts with the positions of West European parties. Key results are a rising salience of this policy field in party manifestos and a detailed description of populist right parties' preferences for government control of higher education institutions and expansion of this sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Supranational modernisation or national partisanship? explaining variation in recovery and resilience plans in Central and Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Oellerich, Nils and Simons, Jasper P.
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT policy , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *FEDERAL government , *ECONOMIC opportunities , *POLICY sciences - Abstract
The European Union's Recovery and Resilience Facility is an unprecedented investment opportunity for economic modernisation. However, while the supranational European Commission assumes considerable influence over the design of national Recovery and Resilience Plans (RRPs), there is substantial diversity among RRPs. This paper analyses the interaction between national governments and the Commission in the coordinative RRP design process. We argue that national policy preferences, rooted in the partisan profiles of governing coalitions, ultimately explain variation in RRP content. We analyse the policymaking process in three semi-peripheral economies in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) – Estonia, Romania, and Slovakia. CEE countries are especially suitable because as expected rule-takers, they function as least likely cases for the relevance of government agency, i.e., national partisanship. Through elite interviews, we trace various elements of each RRP to specific positions of governing coalitions and, with national variation, the Commission's ability to impose its own policy preferences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Quest for Baba Yaga.
- Author
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Spisak, Kris
- Subjects
SLAVIC Americans ,TALE (Literary form) - Abstract
This study investigates the origins of the folktale character, Baba Yaga, as related to ancient goddesses of Slavic culture and as seen through the lens of the historian on a hero's journey, questing for truths. While oral traditions are difficult to trace, comparative analysis between deities of Eastern Europe gives clues to a strong female presence that has evolved and shifted over thousands of years. Baba Yaga's first known textual record was in 1755; however, the character presented at that time is unambiguously not a new invention. By examining traditions of ancient Cucuteni-Trypillia, as well as past folklore studies and known Slavic deities, including Mati-Syra-Zemlya, Mokosh, and Morana, connections arise exhibiting not only a folklore witch who feels so strongly about right and wrong that she may eat you for supper, but also a character who still displays remnants of a history as an earth goddess, goddess of life and death, patron to women, and goddess of transformation. Baba Yaga's stories continue in the modern day, but her historical weight cannot be ignored or forgotten. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
36. When, How, and in Relation to Whom is 'Race' at Play in Invocations of 'Eastern Europe'?
- Author
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Lewicki, Aleksandra
- Subjects
LIBERALISM - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Linguistic diversity in media and state language proficiencies: evidence from Hungarian minority regions in central-Eastern Europe.
- Author
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Csata, Zsombor, Compton, Betty, Liu, Amy H., and Papp Z, Attila
- Subjects
LANGUAGE policy ,LINGUISTIC minorities ,LANGUAGE ability ,MINORITIES ,MEDIA consumption - Abstract
Can linguistic diversity in the media impede state language proficiency? In this paper, we test the extent to which the availability of minority languages in the media affects state language proficiency for ethnic minorities. We take advantage of an exogeneous development: The rapid expansion of Budapest-originating media outside Hungary in the mid-2000s transformed the media landscape in neighbouring states. Using an original survey data of ethnic Hungarians in minority regions in four Central-Eastern European states over two waves, we find (1) the availability of minority language media means minorities are consuming less media in the state language, which in turn induces low levels of state language proficiency – i.e. through an exogeneous exposure mechanism; and (2) minorities with weaker state language proficiency choose to consume minority language media – i.e. through an endogenous selection mechanism. The results suggest a strong relationship between the language of media consumption and linguistic proficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Sustainability of opioid agonist therapy programmes in Belarus, the Republic of Moldova, Tajikistan and Ukraine in the context of transition from Global Fund support during 2020–2023
- Author
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Raminta Stuikyte, Ivan Varentsov, Naimdzhon Malikov, Sergii Dvoriak, Myroslava Filippovych, Alisher Latypov, Aleksei Kralko, Ala Iatco, and Catherine Cook
- Subjects
Opioid agonist therapy ,Methadone ,Buprenorphine ,Injecting drug use ,Eastern Europe ,Central Asia ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Most national programmes of opioid agonist therapy (OAT) in Eastern Europe and Central Asia are at a critical juncture for building their sustainability due to decreasing support from the Global Fund and other international HIV funders. Therefore, it is timely to identify the status, trends, opportunities and risk factors of OAT preparedness in the face of donor transition. Methods The study assessed the OAT sustainability progress in 4 countries: Belarus, the Republic of Moldova, Tajikistan and Ukraine. The study used a comparative country case study design with qualitative methods and two data points in 2020 and 2022–2023. In total, 363 sources were reviewed and used, 83 interviews with key informants and 13 focus groups were conducted with clients, using a joint methodology and a defined Framework with three dimensions: ‘Policy & Governance’; ‘Finance & Resources’; and, ‘Services’. Results All four countries have made improvements to increase OAT sustainability, though it varied. In 2022, Ukraine had a substantial degree of sustainability, followed by Belarus and Moldova with a moderate degree, while Tajikistan’s sustainability was at moderate-to-high risk. No country achieved a high degree of OAT sustainability in any of the three dimensions measured. However, a high degree of sustainability was reported for at least one indicator in Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine: ‘Medicines’; ‘Financial resources’; ‘Evidence and information systems’; ‘Service Accessibility’; or, ‘Service integration & quality’. On average, the greatest improvement between 2020 and 2022 was seen for ‘Availability & coverage’; ‘Financial resources’; ‘Service quality & integration’; and, ‘Service accessibility’. The highest risks across the countries, notably in Belarus and Tajikistan, were recorded for the indicator, ‘Availability and coverage’. Of concern is that the least progress, or even a decline, was found in ‘Human resources’. Conclusions OAT sustainability in the 4 analysed countries remains at risk, despite progress in all countries. Managing HIV donor transition can have positive effects in addressing financial sustainability, especially inspired by Ukraine’s continued progress despite economic contraction and Russia’s invasion. More attention is needed to non-financial aspects of OAT sustainability in donor transition planning. The directions that could have multifaceted positive influence for OAT long-term resilience and scale up for impact on drug problems include decentralisation outside of health settings and broader drug treatment financial and management transformation, together with drug policy reforms. Thus far, viable solutions for sustainability of OAT in conflict areas appear unlikely. Building OAT resilience should remain high on the agenda of national stakeholders, technical partners and donors.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The structure of subclades of the Y-chromosome C haplogroup as evidence of Mongol migrations in the XIII, XVII and XVIII centuries
- Author
-
A. M. Tyurin
- Subjects
khalkha mongols ,oirat mongols ,kalmyks ,kalmaks (dzungars) ,migrations ,eastern europe ,regions of asia ,population genetics ,History of Civilization ,CB3-482 - Abstract
Two major migrations of Mongols outside the territory of Mongolia are known. The first was in the process of the Mongol conquests of the XIII century. The second is the transition of the Oirat Mongols from Western Mongolia to Xinjiang, Semirechye and the Northern Caspian region in the first half of the XVII century, with the formation of the Dzungarian and Kalmyk khanates. There was also migration of Kalmaks (Dzungars) from the territory of the Dzungarian Khanate to other regions after its defeat by China in 1755-59. Within the framework of population genetics, two subpopulations are distinguished among the Mongols: the Oirat Mongols and the Khalkha Mongols (western and eastern Mongols). Both subpopulations participated in the first migration, and only the OiratMongols participated in the second and third. In terms of frequencies, different subclades of the Y-chromosome C haplogroup dominate in subpopulations. Based on this, it is possible to set the task of separately searching for genetic traces of Mughal migration in the XIII century, as well as Oirat migrations in the XVII and XVIII centuries in the gene pool of populations of Eastern Europe and Asian regions. The subclades of haplogroup C are allocated in the YTree Tree: C-Y11591 «Sungir», C-K281 «Kostenki», C-M8574 «Unidentified», C-Y10418 «Avars», C-M48 «Kalmyks», C-M504 «Khazarians» and C-F1067 «Mongols-Khalkha (?)». Their ethnogeography is considered. The subclades «Kalmyks» and «Khazarians» are Oirat. The subclade «Mongols-Khalkha (?)» presumably refers to the Khalkha Mongols. Genetic traces of the migration of the Oirat Mongols in the XVII and XVIII centuries have been revealed the Tatars of Tatarstan, Tomsk, Nizhny Novgorod and Ryazan regions. Tatars, carriers of haplogroup C, are their descendants.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. How likely are Eastern European and central Asian countries to achieve global NCD targets: multi-country analysis
- Author
-
Anastasiya Dumcheva, Jaakko Nevalainen, Tiina Laatikainen, and Pekka Nuorti
- Subjects
Noncommunicable ,Eastern Europe ,Central Asia ,Cardiovascular ,Cancer ,Diabetes ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background In Europe, mortality rates from noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) among persons 30–69 years of age (“NCD premature mortality rates”) have declined significantly, except in twelve countries of Eastern Europe and Central Asia, namely Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan. Data on long-term trends in NCD mortality in these countries are limited. We analyzed NCD premature mortality rates, identified change points in NCD mortality trends and forecasted how likely countries are to achieve the global NCD targets, stratified by gender and NCD type. Methods We used the 1990–2019 Global Burden of Disease database to analyze NCD trends and identified country-specific change points by using piecewise linear regression. We assessed the likelihood of achieving the global targets for reducing NCD premature mortality rates among persons 30–69 years of age from four NCDs: cancers, diabetes, cardiovascular and chronic respiratory diseases. The global NCD targets are 25% reduction in mortality from 2010 to 2025 (WHO 25X25 target) and 33%—from 2015 to 2030 (SDG 3.4.1). We applied the analysis to both genders and four NCDs. Results Only Kazakhstan and Russia are likely to achieve the global NCD targets. For Kazakhstan, WHO 25X25 and SDG 3.4.1 global targets for mortality rates were 494.3 and 374.8 per 100,000 population respectively; the corresponding predicted values (PVs) were 360.6 [CI 260.1–461.1] and 245.1 [CI 113.4–376.8]. For Russia, WHO 25X25 and SDG 3.4.1 global targets were 560.5 and 442.8 per 100,000 population respectively; the corresponding PVs were 427.7 [CI 270.3–585.1] and 311.0 [CI 102.8–519.1]. Achieving NCD global targets is less likely for Kyrgyzstan, while it is unlikely for the rest of countries. Most countries had higher mortality rates and slower progress among men compared with women. The likelihood of achieving overall global NCD targets was mainly explained by reduction in cardiovascular mortality. Conclusions In most Eastern Europe and Central Asia countries, progress towards achieving NCD global targets is slow, or there’s a reverse trend. Further quantitative and qualitative research is needed to understand the underlying reasons. Separate indicators are needed to monitor trends for cancers, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. New parasitic organisms in a productid brachiopod Eomarginifera lobata from the lower Carboniferous of the Moscow Basin, Russia
- Author
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Olev Vinn, Aleksandr A. Mironenko, and Mark A. Wilson
- Subjects
brachiopoda ,symbiosis ,bioclaustrations ,mississippian ,lower carboniferous ,eastern europe ,Fossil man. Human paleontology ,GN282-286.7 ,Paleontology ,QE701-760 - Abstract
Bioclaustrations are among the best ways that parasitic associations are preserved. A new bioclaustration, Haplorygma productidophilia csp. nov., is here described from the ventral interior of the Carboniferous productid brachiopod Eomarginifera lobata. The location and morphology of the structures in the ventral valve differ from the structure in the dorsal valve, suggesting that two different organisms infested the shells of Eomarginifera lobata. It is possible that whether it was ventral or dorsal valve was an important selection criterion for the infesting organisms, which were likely parasites. The proportion of infested productids was low in the population (5.8%). This low infestation rate could indicate that productids had effective methods for resisting parasites, or that the parasites were ineffective in spreading through the brachiopod population.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Study on hydraulic structure optimization in acid sulfate soils of Belanti I Lowland Irrigation Area.
- Author
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Zay, Irfan Setiawan, Triatmodjo, Bambang, and Maas, Azwar
- Subjects
- *
ACID sulfate soils , *HYDRAULIC structures , *MINE soils , *IRRIGATION , *FOOD security - Abstract
The post-covid-19 world condition and the ongoing conflict in Eastern Europe threaten global food security, including Indonesia. The government carried out various policies to avoid the food crisis. The Belanti I Lowland Irrigation Area is a development area that is possible to increase productivity through new land clearing (extensification). There is 1200 ha of shrubs that can be converted into paddy fields. However, it should be noted that most of the land is acid-sulfate soil. Currently, several water structures in the secondary canal are not functioning, so the authors are interested in conducting an optimization study of hydraulic structures as one of the mitigation efforts from the impact of the acid-sulfate soil. The method used in this study is simulation modelling using the Hec-Ras application with the geometry and boundary conditions of the Belanti I Lowland Irrigation Area. Based on the results of the Hec-ras simulation, it is known that the operation of hydraulic structures can maintain a minimum water level on the land to minimize pyrite oxidation in the soil. In addition, the optimization of hydraulic structures can also change water management from two-way to one-way flow so that the leaching process becomes more effective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The impact of ESG Scores in Firm Valuation: Emerging markets in Eastern Europe.
- Author
-
Sobral do Rosário, João, Carlos Annes, Maria, and Goncalves, Miguel
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL, social, & governance factors ,EMERGING markets ,INVESTORS ,FINANCIAL markets ,SUSTAINABILITY ,BASES (Architecture) - Abstract
Purpose: This paper investigates if the value of the firms listed in the stock exchanges from emerging financial markets in Central and Eastern Europe is affected by CSR decisions, as measured through ESG scores over the period 2000-2022. Methodology: This paper follows the methodology followed in previous research conducted by the authors, expanding the pool of countries being analyzed, providing a more complete picture of the impact of ESG classification in firm value in a more diverse context of financial market development. We extend the base Ohlson (1995) valuation model, including not just ESG information (the global ESG score, as well as the scores for the individual pillars, Environmental, Social and Governance), as well as including other control variables. Results: Overall findings show that investors do not include this information in the valuation of these firms, even in Environmental Sensitive Industries, as the impact of these variables are not statistically significantly different from zero. Several robustness checks were run, and the results were confirmed. Additional research is suggested in order to determine any factors specific to this group of countries that could extract more information from the regressions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
44. Mid-Year Economic Report: A challenging 2023 has paved the way for a rebound in 2024, as the North American label market sees small signs of growth
- Author
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Hrinya, Greg
- Subjects
Harper Corporation of America -- International economic relations -- Growth -- Reports ,Container industry -- International economic relations -- Growth -- Reports -- Economic aspects ,Commercial printing industry -- International economic relations -- Growth -- Economic aspects -- Reports ,Printing industry -- International economic relations -- Growth -- Economic aspects -- Reports ,Company growth ,Printing industry ,Business ,Computers and office automation industries ,Publishing industry - Abstract
The label and package printing market can be characterized by significant challenges and strong opportunities that will impact both the short and long-term health of the industry. Economic and workforce [...]
- Published
- 2024
45. Productivity Growth: The Looming Challenge
- Author
-
Mischke, Jan and Canall, Marc
- Subjects
Labor productivity -- Forecasts and trends ,Company growth ,Market trend/market analysis ,Business - Abstract
Reduced to numbers, labor productivity is just a ratio: a measure of output relative to input (in this case, GDP per hour worked, or per worker). But that little ratio [...]
- Published
- 2024
46. From the Hindu Kush to the Banks of the Dnieper: NATO's Promise and Peril in a New Reality
- Author
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Landrum, Jerry and Nagl, John
- Subjects
United States. Army. War College ,Simon & Schuster Inc. ,Book publishing -- Military aspects ,Communism -- Ukraine -- Eastern Europe -- Western Europe -- Russia -- United Kingdom -- France -- United States -- Afghanistan ,General interest ,Military and naval science ,North Atlantic Treaty Organization ,World Peace Council - Abstract
The most successful alliance in world history began three-quarters of a century ago in the wake of the most significant conflict the world had ever seen. The Western powers that [...]
- Published
- 2024
47. The NATO Strategic Concept on Its Seventy-Fifth Anniversary
- Author
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Deni, John R. and Rynning, Sten
- Subjects
General interest ,Military and naval science ,North Atlantic Treaty Organization -- International relations ,United Nations -- International relations - Abstract
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) will celebrate its seventy-fifth anniversary at its 2024 summit in Washington, D.C. NATO's age tells a story of alliance endurance through Cold War tensions, [...]
- Published
- 2024
48. Who in NATO Is Ready for War?
- Author
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Fox, Curtis L.
- Subjects
United Kingdom. British Army ,Italy. Army ,Turkey. Army ,Soldiers -- Military aspects ,General interest ,Military and naval science ,North Atlantic Treaty Organization - Abstract
On 24 February 2022, large numbers of Russian ground forces invaded Ukraine. The mass assault included almost two hundred thousand soldiers and constituted the bulk of Russia's military expeditionary potential. [...]
- Published
- 2024
49. FLORIDA'S NEW IMMIGRATION WAGE: Sunshine and business opportunities--amid shifting geopolitical sands--are drawing growing numbers of immigrants from Poland and other parts of Eastern Europe
- Author
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Vogel, Mike
- Subjects
Poland -- Emigration and immigration ,Eastern Europe -- Emigration and immigration ,Immigration policy ,Immigrants -- Economic aspects -- Forecasts and trends -- Statistics ,Population -- Statistics -- Demographic aspects ,Demography -- Forecasts and trends ,Market trend/market analysis ,Business ,Business, regional - Abstract
A Wednesday morning finds a line of loyal customers growing at Euro Deli, a small store that Polish immigrant Dorota Kotowska and her family have run for 20 years in [...]
- Published
- 2024
50. Intentional damage to metal artefacts in burials and hoards in the south Caucasus, 2000-550 BC
- Author
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Bedianashvili, Giorgi and Robinson, Abby
- Subjects
Anthropological research ,Antiquities -- Discovery and exploration ,Metal products -- Discovery and exploration ,Burial -- Analysis ,Anthropology/archeology/folklore - Abstract
The deposition of intentionally damaged metal arte-facts within burials and hoards is a phenomenon attested in areas as disparate as Ireland and the Caucasus during the Bronze and Iron Ages. While ritual significance is often attributed to such damage in burial contexts, the intentions behind the inclusion of damaged objects in hoards remain enigmatic. This article synthesises evidence for the intentional destruction of metal artefacts from 70 sites in the territory of modern Georgia and analyses patterns of deliberate damage over time and space. The study of these damaged artefacts enhances our understanding of ritual practice at a local level and locates the south Caucasus within the wider networks of this phenomenon. Keywords: Eastern Europe, Caucasus, Bronze Age, Early Iron Age, damage analysis, identity, Introduction The phenomenon of intentionally damaged metal artefacts deposited in burials and hoards is well known to archaeologists studying the Bronze and Iron Ages. The practice is documented over an [...]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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