Russia and Soviet political economy

External reference: https://openalex.org/T13186

  1. Western relations to Russian oligarchs changed rapidly after the Ukraine war
    Explores how Western institutions rapidly disassociated from Russian oligarchs after Ukraine invasion, introducing oligarch-washing as a framework for understanding institutional responses to.
  2. The Impact of Foreign Aid and Cooperation on Social Innovation in Azerbaijan: Example of Vocational Acquisition
    Explore how foreign aid from UNDP, EU, and TIKA transformed Azerbaijan's vocational education through international cooperation, improving alignment between training and labor market needs.
  3. Belarus agroindustry model links import substitution with exports
    Research examining localized import-substituting exports stimulation model in Belarusian agroindustry, analyzing SLISE as offensive strategy reorienting domestic markets toward export preparation.
  4. Oil revenue shocks affected Russia differently after 2014
    Subsample analysis reveals structural breaks in Russia's oil revenue shock transmission mechanisms post-2014, showing reversed fiscal policy effects and strengthened monetary policy inflation.
  5. Exiting Russia
    Study documenting 33.3% exit rate of foreign-invested firms from Russia post-2022 invasion, analyzing sectoral patterns and state influence on politicized exit transactions.
  6. Firms with stronger finances and ESG scores were more likely to leave Russia
    Examine how corporate size, financial capacity, and ESG governance drive multinational firms' divestment decisions from Russia, revealing stakeholder accountability over economic constraints.
  7. Think Tank Diplomacy: A Critical Review of Non-State Influence in Romanian Foreign Policy Making
    Examine how Romanian think tanks influence foreign policy through EU and NATO integration, analyzing funding, networks, and institutional capacity to determine policy impact.
  8. Late-Soviet Moscow tied migrant inclusion to labor compliance
    Explore how Soviet Moscow managed migrant workers through labor-based citizenship conditionality, revealing socialist mechanisms that predate neoliberal governance practices and reshape migration.