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Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1672
Bulletins - June 2, 2010
 

Ukraine, Georgia off NATO's agenda;
Putin, Medvedev split on Soviet legacy

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1671
Bulletins - May 26, 2010
 

Sevastopol extension creates turmoil in Kyiv;
More lustration on Katyn

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1670
Bulletins - May 24, 2010
 

South Stream gathers steam;
A step forward in the Arctic

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1664
Bulletins - April 1, 2010
 

Kremlin moves to combat police corruption;
Yukos and the ECHR

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1663
Bulletins - March 24, 2010
 

A new day for Russian justice?;
Some rare positive demographic news

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1661
Bulletins - March 2, 2010
 

One step forward, one step back in Chechnya;
Repopulating the Far East

 

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1660
Bulletins - February 24, 2010
 

U.S.-Russian arms pact inches forward;
New Russo-Japanese territorial tensions

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1659
Bulletins - February 16, 2010
 

A step forward for South Stream;
Russia's emptying schools

 
Russia's Real Threat? Failure
Articles - February 1, 2010
 

There's an old saying, familiar to historians and foreign policy practitioners, that "geography is destiny." A modern twist to this rule is that demography is no less decisive.

Russia is finding this out the hard way. Over the past several years, under the direction of former President (and current Prime Minister) Vladimir Putin and his handpicked protege, Dmitry Medvedev, Russia may have re-emerged on the international scene with a vengeance. But behind all of the Kremlin's contemporary geopolitical bluster, the successor state of the once-mighty Soviet Union is caught in a demographic and socioeconomic death spiral.

 
Russia Reform Monitor - No. 1658
Bulletins - January 21, 2010
 

Russia and cybersecurity: ally or adversary?;
Soviet nostalgia runs deep