Showing 41 - 58 results of 58 for search 'Media freedom in Russia', query time: 0.11s Refine Results
  1. 41

    The Promotion of Traditional Values through Films and Television Programmes: The Moscow Patriarchate and the Orthodox Encyclopaedia Project (2005–2022) by Marianna Napolitano

    Published 2024-02-01
    “…The long-term implications of this tendency may have very important effects, not only in terms of its objectives but also in terms of the consideration that, after the beginning of the war, many Western film distributors withdrew their licenses from Russia. This paper will analyse “the effect of religion on the institutional system, the regulatory environment of the media and the public sphere” by studying the features of films and TV programs distributed by <i>Orthodox Encyclopaedia</i>, their relations with traditional values promoted both by the Kremlin and the Church, how these have contributed to strengthening the interplay between the Minister of Culture and the Moscow Patriarchate, and the impact this process has had on Russian society and Russia’s relations with the European and Western World in the 2005–2022 period. …”
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    Anti-clustering in the national SARS-CoV-2 daily infection counts by Boudewijn F. Roukema

    Published 2021-08-01
    “…A statistically significant (Pτ < 0.05) correlation was found between the lack of media freedom in a country, as represented by a high Reporters sans frontieres Press Freedom Index (PFI2020), and the lack of statistical noise in the country’s daily counts. …”
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    Norges styring av kunnskapsrelasjoner med land utenfor sikkerhetspolitiske samarbeid by Kristin Fjæstad, Hans Jørgen Gåsemyr

    Published 2024-04-01
    “…This includes collaboration with authoritarian countries such as China and Russia, which are not part of Norway’s security cooperation. …”
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  17. 57

    NEGATION, INCLUDING, GRADUAL OBLIVION: STATE STRATEGIES ON SOVIET HERITAGE IN GEORGIA, ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN by A. A. Tokarev

    Published 2017-11-01
    “…It inherited the Soviet cult of personality and combined this practice with a completely non-Soviet (Eastern) tradition of political dynasties covered by the election system.The Armenian political tradition includes reference to Soviet Armenia as theSecondRepublic, which distinguishes the country from the neighbors who consider themselves to be the successors of the democratic republics that emerged during the Civil War inRussia. Despite competitive elections and free media, the Armenian leadership seeks to establish a political system with a single dominant party and formally maintain electoral competition. …”
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  18. 58

    The theology of Vladimir Nikolaievich Lossky: an exposition and critique by Williams, R

    Published 1975
    “…The intellectual life of Russia at the turn of the century was marked by a lively interest in religious questions, and, in some circles, a cautious rapprochement between the intelligentsia and the Orthodox Church. …”
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