When Mikhail Gorbachev unfurled his reform banners in the late 1980\u27s, many observers inside and outside Russia hailed perestroika as a moral renaissance. The Soviet Union was indeed a spiritually bankrupt society at the time, its citizens demanding a clean break with the past and yearning for a better future. Despite the new openness or glasnost, the changes have been slow in coming and often very controversial. A public opinion survey conducted in February 1991 showed the country morally adrift and deeply divided about the course of reforms
The article offers three competing conceptual approaches to the moral economy in post-Soviet societi...
This dissertation traces the conceptual evolution of humanism in Soviet political, cultural, and phi...
The Moralist International analyzes the role of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian state in...
What could be worse than socialism?--Whatever comes after it. (Contemporary Russian joke). When Mikh...
The break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991 sharply cast the relationships between the Republics of pos...
Received 11 May 2020. Accepted 19 July 2020. Published online 9 October 2020.In the article, it is p...
There has hardly been a stretch in Russian history more saturated with sweeping changes than the per...
My research looks at Soviet republics outside the Russian Federation such as the Ukrainian and Molda...
'Häufig ist die Rede von der 'Krise der Moral' oder dem 'Wertevakuum' in Rußland. Gemeint sind damit...
Soviet leaders had always taken a keen interest in workers\u27 behavior and labor motives and sought...
During the Khrushchev era, Soviet citizens faced formidable physical constraints on privacy and an o...
Based on ethnographic research done in Moscow, Russia, this article describes how some Muscovites ar...
In this paper we try to describe the main feature of Russian civic culture that could influence the ...
believe that morality is not to be found in virtue, that is, not in reason, discipline, good manners...
The article focuses on sociological and ethical aspects of professional practices in post-Soviet Kyr...
The article offers three competing conceptual approaches to the moral economy in post-Soviet societi...
This dissertation traces the conceptual evolution of humanism in Soviet political, cultural, and phi...
The Moralist International analyzes the role of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian state in...
What could be worse than socialism?--Whatever comes after it. (Contemporary Russian joke). When Mikh...
The break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991 sharply cast the relationships between the Republics of pos...
Received 11 May 2020. Accepted 19 July 2020. Published online 9 October 2020.In the article, it is p...
There has hardly been a stretch in Russian history more saturated with sweeping changes than the per...
My research looks at Soviet republics outside the Russian Federation such as the Ukrainian and Molda...
'Häufig ist die Rede von der 'Krise der Moral' oder dem 'Wertevakuum' in Rußland. Gemeint sind damit...
Soviet leaders had always taken a keen interest in workers\u27 behavior and labor motives and sought...
During the Khrushchev era, Soviet citizens faced formidable physical constraints on privacy and an o...
Based on ethnographic research done in Moscow, Russia, this article describes how some Muscovites ar...
In this paper we try to describe the main feature of Russian civic culture that could influence the ...
believe that morality is not to be found in virtue, that is, not in reason, discipline, good manners...
The article focuses on sociological and ethical aspects of professional practices in post-Soviet Kyr...
The article offers three competing conceptual approaches to the moral economy in post-Soviet societi...
This dissertation traces the conceptual evolution of humanism in Soviet political, cultural, and phi...
The Moralist International analyzes the role of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian state in...