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The Chechen Wars: Will Russia Go the Way of the Soviet Union?
- M. Evangelista
- Political Science
- 2002
Following the breakup of the Soviet Union, Boris Yeltsin improvised a system of "asymmetric federalism" to help maintain its successor state, the Russian Federation. However, when sparks of…
Unarmed Forces: The Transnational Movement to End the Cold War
- M. Evangelista
- Political Science
- 1999
Innovation and the Arms Race: How the United States and the Soviet Union Develop New Military Technologies, Matthew Evangelista. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY. 320 pages. ISBN: 0-8014-2165-9.…
- M. Evangelista
- Political Science, Economics
- 22 January 1989
The paradox of state strength: transnational relations, domestic structures, and security policy in Russia and the Soviet Union
- M. Evangelista
- Political ScienceInternational Organization
- 1 December 1995
A transnational community of disarmament proponents achieved considerable success in influencing Soviet security policy in the 1980s on several issues, including two examined here: nuclear testing…
Internationalization and Domestic Politics: Stalin's Revenge: Institutional Barriers to Internationalization in the Soviet Union
- M. Evangelista
- Economics
- 1996
The Pitfalls and Promises of Human Rights Claims in the Chechen Wars: Russia at the European Court
- M. Evangelista
- Political Science, LawEuropean Review of International Studies
- 17 December 2020
Russia’s brutal wars against the separatist republic of Chechnya, starting in the mid-1990s, entailed untold numbers of war crimes and human rights abuses, including kidnapping, extrajudicial…
Cooperation Theory and Disarmament Negotiations in the 1950s
- M. Evangelista
- Political Science
- 1 July 1990
Soviet-American disarmament negotiations of the mid-1950s provide a critical case for evaluating theories of cooperation such as Tit-for-Tat and GRIT. Although both sides were close to agreement on…
Norms, Heresthetics, and the End of the Cold War
- M. Evangelista
- EconomicsJournal of Cold War Studies
- 1 January 2001
The academic debate about the end of the Cold War has reached an impasse. Realists draw on evidence of economic decline and external pressure to explain the Soviet Union's retrenchment.…
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