131 - 140 z 250
OSW Studies | 
 | Jadwiga Rogoża
     Moscow’s control over the regions is currently so thorough that it contradicts the formally existing federal form of government in Russia.
Point of View | 
 | Andrzej Sadecki
     Viktor Orban introduced radical changes in the country and thus challenged the previous economic and political order.
OSW Studies | 
 | Wojciech Górecki
     Since the collapse of the USSR, Russian influence in Central Asia has undergone a far-reaching erosion. The process is unlikely to be reversed.
Point of View | 
 | Tadeusz A Olszański
     The split into historical ‘sub-Ukraines’ has become less pronounced, especially for the younger generation.
Point of View | 
 | Anna Kwiatkowska
     Germany at this stage seems to have no idea of what the long-term strategy of co-operation with Putin's Russia should be.
OSW Report | 
     The international development cooperation systems of the Visegrad countries are all rather new, in most cases only about a decade old.
OSW Studies | 
 | Wojciech Górecki
     Considering the scale of violence in the North Caucasus, the conflict in the region should be regarded as a local civil war.
Point of View | 
 | Justyna Gotkowska
     Norway is currently the only ‘old’ NATO member that strongly relies on the traditional dimension of NATO's collective defence.
OSW Report | 
 | Konrad Popławski
     The Eurozone crisis has forced German exporters to speed up their expansion onto the emerging markets, in particular Brazil, Russia, India and China
OSW Report | 
 | Józef Lang
     Radical Islamic militants from Central Asia have ceased to be a local phenomenon. They have become a kind of ‘jihad academy’.