The Russian government, which has promoted conspiracy theories for years, has done so with special intensity since its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. This article explains the role conspiratorial propaganda has played in the war, highlighting the Kremlin's aims of persuasion, signaling, and confusion. It also discusses how the authorities seek to target varying audiences inside Russia, internationally, and in Ukraine. Although conspiracy theories are unlikely to be decisive in the outcome of the war, they provide insight into the Kremlin’sworldview and indicate how it aims to shape public opinion
The crisis in Ukraine has accentuated the position of Russian television as the government’s stronge...
The article examines the features of information support for Russian aggression from 2014 to 2021. T...
The article is devoted to the study of political communication, inscribed into the new sociocultural...
The Russian Federation has a wide arsenal of tools at its disposal for conducting information warfar...
Rosyjska inwazja w Ukrainie jest bezprecedensowym wydarzeniem w najnowszej historii. Od końca lutego...
The description of the Ukraine crisis as an ‘information war’ in recently published studies seems to...
This article provides a review of possible causes of the effectiveness of the Russian domestic propa...
The article explores the information aggression of Russian mass media in the hybrid war against Ukra...
This article is devoted to the research of media space of several countries in the Western Balkans a...
In this essay, I explore the nature of propaganda in a hybrid media environment through the example ...
After the Russo-Ukrainian War broke out, the motivations that caused Russia to launch the war are di...
Putin's Russia has often been described by foreign observers and the media as the country where cons...
The article concerns the mass-media manipulation of information in Russia about RussianUkrainian con...
The Russian international media outlet Russia Today (RT) has been widely accused in the Western worl...
This article is by LSE Student Elena Serdyuk. It’s a personal account from someone who feels involve...
The crisis in Ukraine has accentuated the position of Russian television as the government’s stronge...
The article examines the features of information support for Russian aggression from 2014 to 2021. T...
The article is devoted to the study of political communication, inscribed into the new sociocultural...
The Russian Federation has a wide arsenal of tools at its disposal for conducting information warfar...
Rosyjska inwazja w Ukrainie jest bezprecedensowym wydarzeniem w najnowszej historii. Od końca lutego...
The description of the Ukraine crisis as an ‘information war’ in recently published studies seems to...
This article provides a review of possible causes of the effectiveness of the Russian domestic propa...
The article explores the information aggression of Russian mass media in the hybrid war against Ukra...
This article is devoted to the research of media space of several countries in the Western Balkans a...
In this essay, I explore the nature of propaganda in a hybrid media environment through the example ...
After the Russo-Ukrainian War broke out, the motivations that caused Russia to launch the war are di...
Putin's Russia has often been described by foreign observers and the media as the country where cons...
The article concerns the mass-media manipulation of information in Russia about RussianUkrainian con...
The Russian international media outlet Russia Today (RT) has been widely accused in the Western worl...
This article is by LSE Student Elena Serdyuk. It’s a personal account from someone who feels involve...
The crisis in Ukraine has accentuated the position of Russian television as the government’s stronge...
The article examines the features of information support for Russian aggression from 2014 to 2021. T...
The article is devoted to the study of political communication, inscribed into the new sociocultural...