We speak to Dr Eleanor Knott about her new book, Kin Majorities: Identity and Citizenship in Crimea and Moldova, which offers a comparative study exploring how ordinary citizens in Crimea and Moldova engaged with Russian and Romanian citizenship respectively prior to Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.Q&A with Dr Eleanor Knott on Kin Majorities: Identity and Citizenship in Crimea and Moldova. McGill-Queens University Press. 2022
This paper unpacks the legitimacy gap existing between post-communist policies of citizenship restit...
Using the case study of new Canadians who support the annexation of Crimea by Russia, this paper sho...
Unlike their luckier neighbors to the west, Ukraine and Moldova did not enjoy a convenient geograph...
In Moldova, the number of dual citizens has risen exponentially in the last decades. Before annexati...
Objective This article investigates what kin identification means from a bottom-up perspective in tw...
According to recent statements by Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Foreign Minister, Sergei ...
With the increasing importance and prevalence of kin-state policies, this thesis identifies three ga...
Throughout the Ukraine crisis, Crimea has been described as a region with strong sympathies toward R...
Russia, Ukraine, and Crimea: Nationality, Sovereignty, and Perspectives By: Reagan Roberts Mentor: D...
This article argues that bottom–up, people-centered research which uses ethnographic and everyday ap...
Why do individuals become dual citizens by acquiring kin-state citizenship? This article examines th...
In this paper, the variation of support of the Russian annexation of Crimea through a socio- economi...
This chapter focuses on Russia’s unlikely experiment in national cultural autonomy (NCA). I start wi...
This article analyzes engagement with Russias Compatriot policy, as an example of ethnizenship-type ...
Russia’s use of hybrid warfare to occupy and annex Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula in 2014 drew intense ...
This paper unpacks the legitimacy gap existing between post-communist policies of citizenship restit...
Using the case study of new Canadians who support the annexation of Crimea by Russia, this paper sho...
Unlike their luckier neighbors to the west, Ukraine and Moldova did not enjoy a convenient geograph...
In Moldova, the number of dual citizens has risen exponentially in the last decades. Before annexati...
Objective This article investigates what kin identification means from a bottom-up perspective in tw...
According to recent statements by Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Foreign Minister, Sergei ...
With the increasing importance and prevalence of kin-state policies, this thesis identifies three ga...
Throughout the Ukraine crisis, Crimea has been described as a region with strong sympathies toward R...
Russia, Ukraine, and Crimea: Nationality, Sovereignty, and Perspectives By: Reagan Roberts Mentor: D...
This article argues that bottom–up, people-centered research which uses ethnographic and everyday ap...
Why do individuals become dual citizens by acquiring kin-state citizenship? This article examines th...
In this paper, the variation of support of the Russian annexation of Crimea through a socio- economi...
This chapter focuses on Russia’s unlikely experiment in national cultural autonomy (NCA). I start wi...
This article analyzes engagement with Russias Compatriot policy, as an example of ethnizenship-type ...
Russia’s use of hybrid warfare to occupy and annex Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula in 2014 drew intense ...
This paper unpacks the legitimacy gap existing between post-communist policies of citizenship restit...
Using the case study of new Canadians who support the annexation of Crimea by Russia, this paper sho...
Unlike their luckier neighbors to the west, Ukraine and Moldova did not enjoy a convenient geograph...