Academic literature on the topic 'Campaign of Russia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Campaign of Russia"

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Jacuch, Andrzej. "Czech-Russian Relations. Russian Disinformation Campaign." Polish Political Science Yearbook 51 (December 31, 2022): 1–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.15804/ppsy202250.

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After the beginning of the conflict in Ukraine and Russia’s annexation of the Crimean Peninsula, the Czech Republic became fully aware of the threats posed by the Kremlin despite President Zeman has denied the presence of Russian troops in Ukraine and has criticised the EU sanctions against Russia. Czechia belongs to the group of countries through which Russia influences the EU, to gradually and deliberately erode its structures. Russia exerts a strong influence on the Czech Republic by non-military means, including disinformation and propaganda, the activities of secret services, and penetration of its economy and specifically its energy sector. The article aims to answer the question about the role of Russian disinformation and propaganda in the context of Russian influence in the Czech Republic. The role of Russian disinformation and propaganda and how Russia influences Czechia is extensively analysed. The main hypothesis is that Russia treats the Czech Republic as a key state for espionage and disinformation activities and as a zone of influence, undermining the sovereignty of the Czech Republic and the role of NATO and the EU.
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Dmitrieva, Olga O. "«THE RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN OF 1812» IN FRENCH HISTORIOGRAPHY OF THE XIX CENTURY." Historical Search 2, no. 1 (March 25, 2021): 47–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.47026/2712-9454-2021-2-1-47-53.

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The Patriotic War of 1812 occupies a special place in the historical memory of Russia. Сoncurrently, in France, the events of this historical period also left an indelible imprint in the memory of the French society. Based on a historiographical review of the historical works written by French historians (Frédéric François Guillaume de Vaudoncourt, R.J. Durdan, E. Labaume, Gaspard Gourgaud, Philippe-Paul de Ségur, L. de Gouvion Saint-Cyr, G. Chambray, A. Jomini and J. Pelet-Clozeau) the author analyzes the development of French historiography devoted to the personality of Napoleon Bonaparte and the historical period of 1812 taken as a whole. It should be noted that Bonaparte’s invasion into the territory of the Russian Empire entered the Russian historiographical tradition as the «Patriotic War of 1812», while in France these events became known in history as the «Napoleon’s Russian Drive» or «Napoleon’s Russian Campaign». The author analyzes the influence of Bonaparte’s personality on the historical consciousness of the European and the Russian society of the XIX century, when the so-called «Napoleonic myth» was very popular, which idealized the personality of this person. Foreign historiography of the war of 1812 differs in that researchers considered the military campaign in Russia in the context of the Napoleonic era as a whole, as a result of which there were either separate studies on the war with Russia, or general works about the period of Bonaparte’s military campaigns.
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Muravsky, Daniel, Snezhana Muravskaia, Diana Akkalaeva, and Sofia Shkaruba. "Beyond all boundaries: women empowerment and the Russian sportswear market." Emerald Emerging Markets Case Studies 12, no. 4 (December 16, 2022): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/eemcs-06-2021-0182.

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Learning outcomes The case demonstrated the importance of cultural peculiarities and mechanisms of customer learning in localizing global marketing campaigns. It introduced the consequences of unexpected spillover of viral marketing and PR scandals on the competition. It helps in developing the students’ ability to determine and assess the impact of viral marketing campaigns from the perspectives of various stakeholders of the organization. Case overview/synopsis In 2017, Nike Russia created one of the most successful and influential ad campaigns in the Russian women's sportswear market by encouraging young girls to try new sports. At the same time, Reebok launched a successful worldwide “be more human” campaign aimed at empowering women all around the globe. Two years later, Reebok Russia tried to localize the successful campaign while adjusting the message to be more assertive. As a result, the company met a country-wide outrage from both feminists and anti-feminists. The case centers around Nikolay Borisov, the CEO of Nike Russia, who was unexpectedly drawn into a provocative public discussion on the use of the female empowerment agenda for cause-related marketing. The case dilemma was set during mid-February 2019 and involved Borisov’s assessment of the impact of the competitor’s viral campaign on the market and choice of a reaction strategy to public outrage. Complexity academic level This case is appropriate for an undergraduate or graduate-level program curriculum for courses dedicated to or including topics related to positioning, doing business in emerging markets, corporate social responsibility and consumer behavior. Before engaging with the case, the students should be aware of basic management and economics-related concepts and terms, such as strategy, positioning, CSR and viral marketing. Supplementary materials Teaching notes are available for educators only. Subject code CSS 8: Marketing.
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Smyth, Regina, and Irina V. Soboleva. "Navalny’s Gamesters: Protest, Opposition Innovation, and Authoritarian Stability in Russia." Russian Politics 1, no. 4 (December 30, 2016): 347–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2451-8921-00104002.

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This paper explores the legacy of the For Fair Elections (ffe) protest movement in 2011–2012 for electoral competition in Russia. We argue that through strategic innovation, oppositions in authoritarian countries can challenge the autocratic state on multiple fronts by transferring resources from street protests to the electoral arena. Our empirical focus is on Alexei Navalny’s campaign for Moscow mayor in late summer 2013. The successful mass mobilization in the movement enabled the campaign to implement a model of electoral innovation based on ideational frames, resources, and tactics drawn from the protest movement. Voter response was stronger than expected, demonstrating the persistence of voter opposition in the face of genuine electoral choice. Relying on press reports, blogs, campaign materials and interviews with activists, we investigate the campaign’s strategy and show why it presented a particular challenge to the regime. Our conclusion underscores the state’s advantage in countering elite opposition innovation, but also highlights how effective opposition innovation can lead to significant changes in strategies to maintain regime stability.
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Urban, Michael E. "Boris El'tsin, democratic Russia and the campaign for the Russian presidency." Soviet Studies 44, no. 2 (January 1992): 187–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09668139208412008.

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Bulatov, A. "Offshore Business of Russian Residents(on the Books “Offshore Business in Foreign-Economic Activity”, “Capital Flow from Russia: Issues and Decisions”, “Deoffshorization of Russian Economy: Possibilities and Limits”)." Voprosy Ekonomiki, no. 2 (February 20, 2015): 149–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.32609/0042-8736-2015-2-149-160.

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The article reviews three books: “Offshore Business in Foreign-Economic Activity” ed. by G. M. Kostyunina, “Capital Flow from Russia: Issues and Decisions” by S. S. Sulakshin et al. and “Deoffshorization of Russian Economy: Possibilities and Limits” by B. A. Kheyfets, that analyze capital flow from Russia, especially in the form of offshore investments of Russian residents. The author offers some hypotheses about specificities of these investments. Russian investments are analyzed against the background of recent anti-offshore campaign in Russia and the world. Some recommendations on state regulation of offshore business of Russian residents are formulated.
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Moskalenko, Sophia, and Ekaterina Romanova. "Deadly Disinformation." Journal of Intelligence, Conflict, and Warfare 5, no. 2 (November 24, 2022): 129–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.21810/jicw.v5i2.5032.

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Viral online disinformation is misleading content that is generated to manipulate public opinion and to circulate rapidly in the digital space. Although viral disinformation has become an instrument for radicalization, the specific psychological mechanisms by which disinformation can be weaponized––wielded as mobilizing and radicalizing political tools––are not yet well-understood. In this paper, we establish the potential of concerted disinformation efforts to impact mass radicalization and political violence, first through historical precedents of deadly disinformation campaigns, then in modern-day examples from the USA and Russia. Comparing and contrasting political effects of two recent disinformation campaigns, QAnon’s #SaveTheChildren campaign in the USA, and anti-LGBTQ disinformation campaign in Russia, this paper highlights the significance of LGBTQ contagion threat—a notion that people can be “turned” into LGBTQ through deliberate outside influence. The psychological and political consequences of such messaging, its main target audience, and vulnerability factors rendering individuals especially susceptible to its radicalizing effects are discussed.
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Rich, Vera. "Russia to start anti-poliomyelitis vaccination campaign." Lancet 347, no. 8997 (February 1996): 319. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(96)90489-4.

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Seferbekov, Magomedkhabib R. "JOHN BELL ON THE CAMPAIGN OF PETER I TO DERBENT." History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Caucasus 18, no. 4 (December 25, 2022): 919–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.32653/ch184919-931.

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A number of publications have been devoted to the Persian campaign of Peter the Great and the stay of the Russian Imperial troops on the southwestern shores of the Caspian Sea in 1722–1735 – monographs, articles, dissertations, collections of documents and materials prepared with the use of a wide range of sources and literature. This topic continues to attract the attention of historians even today. It has acquired particular relevance in connection with the 350th anniversary of the birth of the first Russian Emperor Peter the Great and the 300th anniversary of the Persian campaign. A large number of documentary sources from the collections of the federal and regional archives of Russia cover the history of the Persian campaign and its results, which made it possible to reveal new episodes of imperial policy in the Caucasian-Caspian region in the first quarter of the 18th century. Among the most valuable sources on the history of the Persian campaign are the travel notes of the English-speaking authors – the direct participants and eyewitnesses of the events described. One of these sources is the John Bell’s book “Travels from St. Petersburg, across Russia, to different parts of Asia”, particularly, the section titled “Journey from Moscow to Derbent in Persia, in 1722”, translated by the author of the paper into Russian with commentaries. This translation may be a valuable contribution to both the ethnography and historiography of the Russian Caucasian studies of the first quarter of the 18th century.
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Boguslavsky, Dmitry V., Natalia P. Sharova, and Konstantin S. Sharov. "Public Policy Measures to Increase Anti-SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination Rate in Russia." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 6 (March 13, 2022): 3387. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19063387.

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The total vaccination rate remains relatively low in Russia as of March 2022 (around 55%, with around 20% in some regions). In the paper, we study the reasons for it. We communicate the results of our survey aimed at detecting reasons for the relatively low anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccination rate in Russia (47.1% as of mid-January 2022) and suggest potential measures to increase the level of confidence in the Russian vaccination campaign. A total of 14,310 users exhibited interest to participate in the research (16.84% of the total number of invitations sent in the Russian social network VKontakte). After the sample set repair, only 5822 (40.68% of those who agreed to participate) responses were suitable for the research, and they composed the final set. The age range of the respondents was 16–51 years old (y.o.) with a mean of 29.1 ± 10.6 y.o. The proportion of the female gender in responses was 44.23%. A total of 2454 persons (42.15%) expressed their hesitant, cautious, or negative attitude towards vaccine uptake. Of the 2454 persons with cautious attitude towards vaccination, only 928 (37.82%) were concerned about the quality of the Russian vaccines. A total of 1323 individuals (53.91%) supported one or more conspiracy beliefs. A total of 5064 (86.98% of the whole set) showed cautious or negative attitude towards the planned introduction of a nationwide system of vaccination certification/verification based on QR codes. The main social factors that hinder the Russian vaccination campaign are: vexation over the lack of desire of officials to receive feedback from the general population regarding vaccination, wide support for conspiracy beliefs, and controversy over the QR code-based digital system. To elevate the vaccination rate in Russia, the following steps may be taken: social encouragement of those who support vaccination, increase in transparency of the vaccination campaign, acceptance of both digital and paper vaccination certificates, increase in participation of society in vaccination-related discussions, public disclosure of vaccine composition, and avoidance of excessive digitalization of data in the vaccination campaign.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Campaign of Russia"

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Shepler, Ryan. "The Bolshevik campaign against religion in Soviet Russia 1917-1932 /." Connect to resource, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1811/32192.

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Jugaste, Artur. "Communicating Georgia : Georgia's information campaign in the 2008 war with Russia." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för journalistik, medier och kommunikation (JMK), 2011. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-59081.

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During the 2008 South Ossetia war, Georgia and Russia fought what the English-language media called "a public relations war“. This was an interesting example of modern information warfare where governments allied with public relations agencies battled for symbolic power on the media field. This study investigates the information campaign that the Georgian government launched to promote their framing of the conflict in the English-language media. First-hand information about the campaign strategies and techniques is gathered by interviewing the people who worked as PR consultants for the Georgian government during the war in 2008. The eventual PR output is mapped and press release texts are compared with articles from The New York Times and The Washington Post in a framing analysis. The results indicate that Georgia won the PR war as the coverage in the U.S. newspapers clearly supported Georgia's framing. This outcome is attributed to the Georgian side's media management activities that skillfully anticipated the needs of the foreign correspondents covering the conflict. However, the study points out that the supportive coverage was not the result of Georgia's information campaign only. Other factors have to be taken into account, most notably the U.S. administration's strong backing of the Georgian leadership that shaped the tone of the articles written about the war. Future research should look at how the war was covered in countries with less explicit political support for Georgia, as well as investigate the PR efforts on the Russian side during and after the war.
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Strickland, John. "The church valuables campaign in the history of the new martyrdom in Russia." Online full text .pdf document, available to Fuller patrons only, 2004. http://www.tren.com.

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Pechenkina, Ekaterina. "La mobilisation des jeunes sur les réseaux sociaux pendant les campagnes électorales : l'analyse comparative entre la France et la Russie." Thesis, Bordeaux, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016BORD0463/document.

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La présente thèse propose une analyse et une systématisation de l’utilisation des réseaux sociaux en période électorale tant au niveau national que local. Ainsi seront étudiées les techniques numériques utilisées, les formes et les méthodes de communication politique « en ligne » au cours des campagnes présidentielles de 2012 en France et en Russie et les campagnes municipales à Bordeaux et à Moscou en 2014 et 2013. Seront donc comparés les ressorts utilisés dans deux pays différents et qui ont permis de transformer les grands réseaux sociaux tels que Facebook, Twitter, Instagram et VKontakte en outils de rassemblement politique attirant de nombreux jeunes à participer activement au processus de campagne.Des entretiens réalisés avec des responsables des mouvements politiques français de Gironde tels ceux des Jeunes socialistes, des Jeunes Populaires et ceux du Front National, il ressort que l’activité numérique en France relève d’un caractère constructif. Ils servent à attirer et mobiliser la jeunesse de moins de 30 ans autours des candidats et de leurs partis grâce à un support en ligne mais s’accompagnent d’un militantisme de terrain, dans la vie réelle.En revanche, il apparaît qu’en Russie, le niveau élevé et l’influence de ces jeunes sur Internet fournit un soutien pour les nouvelles institutions de la société civile. Le succès de la mobilisation des jeunes appartenant à la classe moyenne urbaine relève d’une combinaison de « citoyenneté » et de « massification » de la protestation sur le réseau.En 2013, la volonté et mobilisation active des jeunes dans le projet politique à permis l’émergence de l’opposant Alekseï Navalny, qui a réuni 27% des suffrages et atteint la seconde place aux élections municipales de Moscou. La quasi intégralité de sa campagne a été effectuée sur les réseaux sociaux. Si le fait est courant pour nombre de ses homologues occidentaux, il convient de relever que ce n’est pas habituel pour les politiciens russes. Cette campagne « révolutionnaire » d’A. Navalny a été rendue possible par le fort soutien des jeunes Moscovites qu’il a pu mobiliser sur le plus grand réseau russe : VKontakte. L’organisation de la campagne s’est presque entièrement fondée sur l’utilisation des réseaux sociaux, tant pour la distribution de tracts dans les rues, que la sensibilisation et les collectes de dons
This thesis will focus on the analysis and systematization of the use of social networks in the presidential campaigns, both in France and in Russia in 2012, as well as in the municipal campaigns in Bordeaux and Moscow, in 2014 and 2013 respectively. The development of this thesis will also include the basic use of technologies, as well as the forms and methods of political online communication at the actual stage of their development.In this thesis, the examination of the political mechanisms used in France and Russia will be carried out in order to assess how social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and VKontakte have developed into a powerful tool, with their main aim being to attract more and more young people to actively participate in the election campaigns as well as the voting process in general.Through the conduction of interviews with the chiefs of French Youth Movements, such as the Young Socialists (Gironde), the People’s Young (Gironde), and the Young of National Front (Gironde), we have found that these movements tend to have an overall peaceful nature in France. They aim to attract and mobilize young people (of up to 30 years old) to provide support both online and in the real world, for candidates of the major French political parties, namely the UMP, the Socialist Party and the National Front.In comparison, in Russia, the high level presence and influence of Youth Movements on the Internet provides support for new institutions forming in civil society. The success of the youth mobilization from the urban middle class can be explained by the combination of “civic consciousness” and “massive involvement”.In 2013, young Russians mobilized for active participation in the political life of Alexei Navalny, one of the leaders of the Russian opposition, who managed to obtain 27% of the votes in the municipal elections of Moscow, the equivalent to second place. His «revolutionary” electoral campaign was predominantly transmitted through social networks, notably through the use of VKontakte (the largest social network in Russia), in order to gain a large amount of support from young Moscovites. This action is deemed to be very uncommon among Russian politicians, and is more likely to be seen among Western homologues. Consequently, this led to the distribution of leaflets in the streets, in the subway, going door-to-door, as well as organizing the collection of donations for the campaign across networks
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Dobrenko, Vladimir. "Conspiracy of peace : the Cold War, the international peace movement, and the Soviet Peace Campaign, 1946-1956." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 2016. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/3479/.

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This thesis deals with the Soviet Union’s Peace Campaign during the first decade of the Cold War as it sought to establish the Iron Curtain. The thesis focuses on the primary institutions engaged in the Peace Campaign: the World Peace Council and the Soviet Peace Committee. Chapter 1 outlines the domestic and international context which fostered the peace movement (provisional title) and endeavours to construct a narrative of the political and social situation which the Soviet Union found itself in after World War II (as a superpower and an empire leading the Socialist Bloc) in order to put forward the argument that the motivations for undertaking the project of the 'peace movement', above all, were of an international-political nature, rather than of an internal and domestic nature. Chapter 2 starts off with the Soviet project of establishing an international peace movement, including firstly the World Peace Congress, which simultaneously convened in Paris and Prague, and then proceeds with the institutional, political and social development of the Campaign up to the dissolution of the Cominform in 1956. The task of this chapter is not merely to chronicle the history of the Soviet Peace Campaign, but to extract from the narrative underlying themes and organise them accordingly. Finally, Chapter 3 deals with internal Soviet Peace Campaign. The task here is to construct a historical account of the Soviet anti-war movement from 1949 to 1956 through the institutional history of the Soviet Peace Committee. Furthermore, the aim is to demonstrate the relationship between the Soviet Peace Committee and party and state institutions and its dependency on and implications for political decision-making processes within the Central Committee of the Communist Party. Finally, this chapter will also examine the role of the Soviet Peace Committee and its affiliated institutions in the advancement of Cold War propaganda through the media (i.e. press, journalism, etc.), literature (i.e. novels, poems, etc.), film and political art (i.e. posters, caricature, etc.).
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Callum, Douglas R. "Soviet society and law : the history of the legal campaign to enforce the constitutional duty to work." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 1995. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/6553/.

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In both the 1936 and 1977 USSR Constitutions conscientious labour in socially useful activity was decreed to be a "duty and matter of honour" for every Soviet citizen. This study examines the various approaches adopted by successive Soviet leaderships in their determined efforts to reinforce that ethos. It focuses, in particular, on the so-called "anti-parasite" laws dating back to 1957, when as a part of Khrushchev's attempt to revive popular justice, several smaller republics experimented with enactments that permitted peer justice institutions in the form of amorphous social assemblies to exile "parasites" via a procedure which bypassed the existing court system. Special attention is devoted to the criticism lodged against the laws (during their adoption and spread to the other union republics in 1961) by members of the legal profession, who complained that the wide punitive given to the extra-judicial bodies and the attitudes and behaviour encouraged in them would erode the respect for "socialist legality" which they had been charged with enhancing in the minds of the mass public. Although as a result of such criticism, the Khrushchev regime modified the peer justice institutions in the early 1960's, and even though his populism was absorbed by or subordinated to the normative sector of social control in Brezhnev's legal policy, the study highlights the fact that complaints of abuses and inconsistencies in anti-parasite proceedings continued to be levelled against the prosecution process. This, it is contended, was due in large part to the extreme vagueness of the notion of social parasitism itself, although the lack of a precise and consistent definition of this peculiar offence (and of the key elements which were deemed to constitute it) was actually seen as necessary and even desirable since it allowed the authorities to use the anti-parasite legislation as a weapon of suppression against a broad spectrum of socially, politically, and economically inconvenient groups within Soviet society.
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Kanzler, Katja, and Marina Scharlaj. "Between Glamorous Patriotism and Reality-TV Aesthetics: Political Communication, Popular Culture, and the Invective Turn in Trump’s United States and Putin’s Russia." De Gruyter, 2017. https://tud.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A38600.

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This article proceeds from the observation that Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin—two politicians frequently correlated and compared since Trump’s bid for the Presidency—have been remarkably successful in mobilizing support for their politics and in seemingly immunizing their rhetorics against vernacular critique. To work toward an understanding of this phenomenon, we propose to look at how political communication by and around the two politicians draws on forms and venues of popular culture. Both contexts, we will argue, have developed new strategies for the instrumentalization of popular culture, strategies that, while actualized differently in the two settings, revolve around an ‘invective turn’ in political communication—a radicalization of the familiar nationalist rhetoric of ‘us versus them’ that seems specifically fueled by pop-cultural forms. To explore this traffic between pop and politics, this article puts into conversation two case studies: On the one hand, of Trump’s campaign speeches which, we contend, symbolically organize around the logic of agôn—of the competitive game—as it has coagulated in the reality-tv genre of the gamedoc. On the other hand, we look at (state-controlled) pop music in the Russian genre of Ėstrada which, thus our argument, advertises a distinct form of patriotism through the principle of ‘glamour.’ Glamour, in Putin’s Russia, operates simultaneously as a style and as an ideology of self-glorification. The article will outline how reality tv’s logic of agôn and patriotic pop music’s aesthetics of glamour each fuel a qualitatively new orientation of political discourse toward the aesthetically charged, affect-saturated denigration of others and valorization of self.
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Zabel, Randel L. "Campaigns, independent voters, and the 1996 Russian presidential election /." Full text (PDF) from UMI/Dissertation Abstracts International, 2001. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/utexas/fullcit?p3008482.

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Medvedeva, Yulia. "Value-framing of issues in the 2004 presidential campaign by American newspapers in Russian." Diss., Columbia, Mo. : University of Missouri-Columbia, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10355/5740.

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Thesis (M.A.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2008.
The entire dissertation/thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file (which also appears in the research.pdf); a non-technical general description, or public abstract, appears in the public.pdf file. Title from title screen of research.pdf file (viewed on September 8, 2008) Includes bibliographical references.
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Rath, Andrew. "The global dimensions of Britain and France's Crimean war naval campaigns against Russia, 1854-1856." Thesis, McGill University, 2012. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=107828.

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The Crimean War was fought far outside its namesake peninsula in the Black Sea Region. Between 1854 and 1856, Anglo-French naval forces attacked the Russian Empire in the Baltic, White Sea, and Pacific. These campaigns receive little attention from modern historians, and much of the work that does exist relies on a limited number of English-language sources. This dissertation, on the other hand, is a comprehensive examination of these campaigns built on a foundation of primary documents written in English, French, and Russian. It also synthesizes relevant secondary scholarship in order to provide a comprehensive background for the three major European belligerents and to consider the perspectives of the other polities impacted by the conflict, specifically Sweden-Norway, Denmark, China, and Japan. This work's approach yields a more complete understanding of the worldwide context in which the Crimean War occurred. Ultimately, the wide-ranging imperial conflict that emerges starkly contrasts with customary depictions of the conflict as a petty, regionalized example noteworthy only as a cautionary tale of failed diplomacy and generalship or as a venue for advances is battlefield medicine, journalism, and photography.
La Guerre de Crimée se déroula aussi hors de sa péninsule éponyme dans la région de la Mer Noire. Entre 1854 et 1856, des forces franco-britanniques attaquèrent l'Empire Russe dans la Mer Baltique, la Mer Blanche, ainsi que dans l'Océan Pacifique. Ces campagnes ont reçu peu d'attention de la part des historiens des temps modernes, et la majorité de ces effort se basent seulement sur des sources anglaises. Au contraire, ce mémoire contient une analyse exhaustive de ces campagnes se basant sur des documents originaux anglais, français et russes. Il synthétise les études modernes dans le but d'offrir un arrière-plan complet pour les trois grandes puissances européennes, ainsi que dans le but de considérer les perspectives des autres puissances impactées par le conflit, en particulier la Suède-Norvège, le Danemark, la Chine et le Japon. L'approche de cette étude offre une compréhension exhaustive du contexte mondial dans lequel la Guerre de Crimée se déroula. Finalement, le conflit impérial de grande envergure qui émerge s'oppose aux présentations usuelles du conflit comme étant un insignifiant exemple régional de note seulement comme un avertissement d'une diplomatie et d'une stratégie échouée, ou simplement comme une avenue pour des progrès dans la médecine de guerre, le journalisme ainsi que la photographie.
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Books on the topic "Campaign of Russia"

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Clausewitz, Carl von. The campaign of 1812 in Russia. New York: Da Capo Press, 1995.

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Clausewitz, Carl von. The campaign of 1812 in Russia. Watertown, Mass: Blue Crane Books, 1996.

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Clausewitz, Carl von. The campaign of 1812 in Russia. London: Greenhill Books, 1992.

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Campaign in Russia: The Waffen SS on the Eastern Front. Torrance, Calif: Institute for Historical Review, 1985.

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Degrelle, Léon. Campaign in Russia: The Waffen SS on the Eastern Front. Bristol: Crecy, 1985.

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Blau, George E. The German campaign in Russia: Planning and operations, 1940-1942. Washington, D.C: Center of Military History, United States Army, 1988.

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History, Center of Military, ed. The German campaign in Russia: Planning and operations (1940-1942). Washington, D.C: Center of Military History, U.S. Army, 1988.

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Degrelle, Léon. Campaign in Russia: The Waffen SS on the eastern front. Torrance, Calif: Institute for Historical Review, 1985.

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Degrelle, Leon. Campaign in Russia: The Waffen SS on the Eastern Front. Torrance, Calif: Institute for Historical Review, 1985.

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The KGB campaign against corruption in Moscow. Pittsburgh, Pa: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Campaign of Russia"

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Glazunova, Sofya. "Navalny’s YouTube Communication During the Presidential Campaign 2016–2018." In Digital Activism in Russia, 145–65. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-93503-0_8.

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Brandenberger, David. "Politics Projected into the Past: What Precipitated the 1936 Campaign Against M.N. Pokrovsky?" In Reinterpreting Revolutionary Russia, 202–14. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230624924_12.

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Lonkila, Markku, Larisa Shpakovskaya, and Philip Torchinsky. "Digital Activism in Russia: The Evolution and Forms of Online Participation in an Authoritarian State." In The Palgrave Handbook of Digital Russia Studies, 135–53. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-42855-6_8.

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AbstractThis chapter describes how digitalization has affected activism in Russia by tracing the evolution, particularity, and the most visible forms of online activism in the context of the increasingly authoritarian Russian state. It discusses online activism in relation to “connective action” and illustrates it with two examples of contentious political activism: the anti-corruption campaign led by Alexei Navalny and the struggle to protect online communication from state surveillance by the Telegram messenger service. In addition, the chapter presents examples of Russian activism, which do not directly challenge the Kremlin.
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West, Sally. "Russian Culture Through a Shot Glass: The Shustov Cognac Advertising Campaign, 1910–12." In Material Culture in Russia and the USSR, 103–17. London; New York: Bloomsbury Academic, animprint of BloomsburyPublishing, 2017.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003086024-8.

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Eklof, Ben. "Russian Literacy Campaigns, 1861–1939." In National Literacy Campaigns, 123–45. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-0505-5_6.

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Sykes, Percy. "The Disastrous Campaigns With Russia." In History of Persia, ii. 311—ii. 322. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203426722-78.

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Kardanova, Nataliya. "Верительная грамота Петра Первого в Светлейшую Республику в контексте российско-венецианских дипломатических отношений." In Biblioteca di Studi Slavistici, 51–65. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6453-723-8.07.

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In 1710-1711, at the time of preparation for the Prut campaign, Peter I sent three envoys to Venice, namely Urbich, Boris and Karetta. In 1716-1720, Becklemishev was appointed permanent Russuan economic representative in Venice. The article presents an analysis of credential letters of Peter the Great’s envoys in Venice in connection with the pre-existing tradition and with due regard to the specifics of the Russian diplomatic ceremonial. The author aims to describe stylistic specifics of Peter I’s credential letter and to determine its role for the subsequent tradition.
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Roberts, Ian W. "The First Half of the Campaign." In Nicholas I and the Russian Intervention in Hungary, 143–64. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-21195-1_8.

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Roberts, Ian W. "The Second Half of the Campaign." In Nicholas I and the Russian Intervention in Hungary, 165–84. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-21195-1_9.

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Eversberg, Thomas. "Russians, Rockets, and Election Campaigns." In The Moon Hoax?, 5–17. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05460-1_2.

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Conference papers on the topic "Campaign of Russia"

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Eshiev, A. M. "Epic "Manas", "Tale of Igor's Campaign" and "Tale of Bygone Years": anthroponymic, ethnonymic parallels, analogies." In SCIENCE OF RUSSIA: GOALS AND OBJECTIVES. "Science of Russia", 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/sr-10-06-2020-83.

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Pykhtin, Alexey. "THE FUNCTIONAL MODEL OF CENTRALIZED ADMISSION CAMPAIGN TO THE UNIVERSITIES OF RUSSIA." In 4th SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on SOCIAL SCIENCES and ARTS Proceedings. STEF92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2017/35/s13.090.

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Ayupova, V. K. "PR activities of Housing Investment Campaign LLC based on identifying the main segments of the consumer market." In SCIENCE OF RUSSIA: GOALS AND OBJECTIVES. L-Journal, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/sr-10-12-2020-46.

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ООО «Жилищная инвестиционная компания» проводит исследования для выявления потребительских предпочтений в строительстве, с помощью данных исследований отдел маркетинга и развития выясняет какие жалобы и предложения есть у потребителей, что им не понравилось, и что еще нужно добавить при возведении домов. Но при всем разнообразии проводимых исследований четкого сегментирования потребительского рынка не проводилось. Поэтому актуально в рамках исследования провести анализ по выявлению социально-демографических характеристик аудитории строительных компаний. Проанализировать и разбить целевую аудиторию на сегменты и выявить наиболее эффективные каналы коммуникации и разработать коммуникативную политику на 2021 год, для улучшения эффективности PRдеятельности жилищной компании.
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Tleulesova, A. Sh, and A. N. Nugumanova. "STYLISTIC FEATURES OF RUSSIAN AND KAZAKHSTAN PRE-ELECTION POLITICAL SLOGANS." In Proceedings of the XXIII International Scientific and Practical Conference. RS Global Sp. z O.O., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31435/rsglobal_conf/25112020/7257.

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Such a specific element of political communication as a slogan, which is often used within the election campaign, has been to the present day a less studied issue in the Russian and Kazakh political linguistics. Nowadays this genre of political text is being mainly mastered by the sociologists, politologists, image-makers, etc., dealing with the issues of electoral technologies. This article deals with the study of stylistic features of a political slogan which are characteristic for the election campaigns of Russia and Kazakhstan held in the period of recent decades. The results of the study show that the main purpose of their use is to enhance the expressiveness of the statement. This allows us to conclude that the language of political slogans has great opportunities and resources to implement this impact. It also becomes apparent that persuasiveness is one of the key functions of the slogan's pragmatic functions.
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Kruglikov, N. A., A. Yu Pastuhovich, G. A. Yakovlev, V. I. Grokhovsky, and O. Unsalan. "Analysis of the bright fireball over Turkey on may 27, 2020 followed by meteorite recovery campaign." In Всероссийская с международным участием научная конференция студентов и молодых ученых, посвященная памяти Полины Евгеньевны Захаровой «Астрономия и исследование космического пространства». Ural University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/b978-5-7996-3229-8.30.

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Bright fireball on May 27, 2020 was imaged in a lot of points in Turkey, Georgia and Armenia, as well as from Stavropol Region (Russia). Based on these observations we present results on luminous trajectory reconstruction which led to several meteorite expeditions in next few months.
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Isaeva, Tatiana, and Vera Petrova. "Psychological and Pedagogical Aspects of University Admission Campaign in Russia in the Period of COVID-19 Pandemic." In II International Scientific and Practical Conference " COVID-19: Implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (RTCOV ). SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0011110900003439.

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Temer, Elias, and Deiveindran Subramaniam. "Fully Automated and Wirelessly Enabled Drillstem Tests: Seven-Zones Campaign Case Study in Sakhalin." In SPE/ICoTA Well Intervention Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/204401-ms.

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Abstract Well test is one of the crucial steps required to forecast production investments of their fields. However, the operators face many challenges such as reduced capex, exploration budgets, and bad weather conditions that limit the well testing time window. To overcome these challenges, an automated well testing platform enabled a real time monitoring and controlling more zones in a single run for appraisal wells in the Sea of Okhotsk, Russia. This article highlights the test objectives, the job planning, and automated execution of wirelessly enabled operations in very hostile conditions and limited time period. The use of a telemetry system to well test seven zones allowed real-time data acquisition, control of critical downhole equipment, data transmission to the operator's office in town. Various operational cases will be discussed to demonstrate how automated data acquisition and downhole operations control has optimized operations for both the service company and the operator.
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Zinno, D., D. Grir, Y. Mazhirin, A. Rubtsova, and Y. Naumov. "First Successful Microseismic Campaign in Russia, Results and General Criteria for Successful Application, Lessons Learned and the Way Forward." In EAGE and SPE Joint Workshop: Geoscience Monitoring of the Field Development Process. Netherlands: EAGE Publications BV, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201701925.

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Dzutcev, Alan Kazbekovich, Svetlana Rafailievna Pavlova, Ludmila Sergeevna Belyakova, Ivan Sergeevich Chukanov, Elizaveta Andreevna Inozemtseva, Yury Aleksandrovich Delyanov, Nikita Igorevich Buev, et al. "Getting More with Less: Low-Viscosity Fluid Implementation for a Conventional Formation in Western Siberia, Russia." In SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/205917-ms.

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Abstract Oil-saturated strata of Western Siberia fields are represented by laminated low-permeability sandstone separated by shale layers. Therefore, when designing hydraulic fractures, it is important to create longer propped fracture half-length and provide coverage of oil-saturated layers along the entire net height. Implementation of high-volume proppant fractures in combination with high-viscosity crosslinked fluids leads to excessive fracture height growth. This results in ineffective proppant distribution in the target layer and, moreover, to unwanted water production if the water contact is close. To overcome these issues, it was proposed to use a novel hydraulic fracturing fluid that is a viscous slickwater based on synthetic polymer-polyacrylamide (also known as HiVis FR or HVFR). The low viscosity of HVFR (about 10 times lower than that of a crosslinked gel) allows a long fracture to be created and restricts height growth. Additionally, use of polyacrylamide instead of guar gives a larger value of retained conductivity. The full workflow for implementing HVFR for hydraulic fracturing in conventional formations includes candidate evaluation, HVFR laboratory testing, an integrated engineering approach to fracture modeling, operational considerations, and post-fracturing production analysis. The workflow evolved during the technology implementation cycle in a specific oil field, particularly the modeling step, which used a new high precision multiphysics (MP) model. The MP model provides an advanced, high-quality high- precision fracturing design to properly evaluate fracture geometry and proppant distribution by accounting for proppant settling in viscoelastic fluid and an accurate simulation of proppant placement when using a pulsing schedule. During the 2-year project, considerable success was achieved in expanding of the technology implementation scope. Several records were achieved on oil field - a 150-t of ceramic proppant (SG, specific gravity,~3.1) were placed in a conventional reservoir by low-viscosity fracturing fluid and the first worldwide combination of viscous slickwater with channel fracturing technology was successfully performed. The use of HVFR, due to ability of fracture growth control, prevented breakthrough into the water-bearing zone. In addition, considerable improvement of operational efficiency was achieved due to use of cold water, lower amounts of additives, and less equipment, which resulted in a smaller location and environmental footprint. This first implementation of the viscous slickwater in conventional wells in Western Siberia enabled evaluating its effect on production rate. Increasing demand for maximizing production from low-permeability formations makes the result of this viscous slickwater implementation campaign of special interest. The application of a full engineering workflow, including design, execution, and evaluation of the Viscous slickwater treatments is a key to successful technology implementation and production optimization.
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Temer, Elias, Deiveindran Subramaniam, Yermek Kaipov, Carlos Merino, Vladimirovich Latvin, and Alexanderovich Barylnik. "Bringing Flexibility and Automation to Well Testing Operations Through Wireless Telemetry - Case Study." In Offshore Technology Conference. OTC, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4043/31275-ms.

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Abstract Dynamic reservoir data are a key driver for operators to meet the forecasted production investments of their fields. However, many challenges during well testing, such as reduced exploration and capex budgets, complex geologic structures, and inclement weather conditions that reduce the well testing time window can prevent them from gathering critical reservoir characterization data needed to make more informed field development planning decisions. To overcome these challenges, a live, downhole reservoir testing platform enabled the most representative reservoir information in real time and connected more zones of interest in a single run for appraisal wells in the Sea of Okhotsk, Russia. This paper describes the test requirements, the prejob planning, and automated execution of wirelessly enabled operations that led to the successful completion of the well test campaign in very hostile conditions, a remote area, and restricted period. The use of a telemetry system to well testing in seven zones enabled real-time control of critical downhole equipment and acquired data at surface, which in turn was transmitted to the operator's office in town in real time. Various operation examples will be discussed to demonstrate how automated data acquisition and downhole operations control has been used to optimize operations by both the service company and the operator.
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Reports on the topic "Campaign of Russia"

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Allen, Brian M. The Effects of Infectious Disease on Napoleon's Russian Campaign. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada398046.

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Bhattacharya, Jay, Christina Gathmann, and Grant Miller. The Gorbachev Anti-Alcohol Campaign and Russia's Mortality Crisis. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, December 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w18589.

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