Related Papers
Research and Science Today No. 1(11)/2016.pdf
Flavius Marcau
RESEARCH AND SCIENCE TODAY is a biannual science journal established in 2011. The journal is an informational platform that publishes assessment articles and the results of various scientific research carried out by academics. We provide the authors with the opportunity to create and/or perfect their science writing skills. Thus, each issue of the journal (two per year and at least two supplements) will contain professional articles from any academic field, authored by domestic and international academics. The goal of this journal is to pass on relevant information to undergraduate, graduate, and post-graduate students as well as to fellow academics and researchers; the topics covered are unlimited, considering its multi-disciplinary profile. Regarding the national and international visibility of Research and Science Today, it is indexed in over 30 international databases (IDB) and is present in over 200 online libraries and catalogues; therefore, anybody can easily consult the articles featured in each issue by accessing the databases or simply the website.
Journal Canadian Slavonic Papers Revue Canadienne des Slavistes Volume 60, 2018 - Issue 3-4
Portraying heroes and villains: Moldovan and Transnistrian print media during the 1992 war in the Dniester Valley
2018 •
Eduard Baidaus
https://pl.booksc.xyz/book/73235071/988a18
Transnistrian conflict in the context of post-Soviet nation-building
Anastasia Mitrofanova
After Crimea: Disarmament, Frozen Conflicts, and Illicit Trafficking in Eastern Europe
Eliza Gheorghe
July
Ethnic and linguistic identification in Moldova: regarding geographic, political, and cultural aspects
2020 •
Cătălina Ceban
This Bachelor’s thesis is dedicated to the ethnic identification status of Moldovan citizens on the territory of contemporary Moldova. As a result of the many ideological influences and territorial changes of the past, a melange appeared, which geographically, politically, and culturally is known today as the Republic of Moldova. The concept of nationality in the international public law, and the following-up reality after the process of historical massive changes, clearly outlines the contradictory relation of the Moldovans regarding their ethnic origins and their present identification as a people. The mixed public opinion on the ethnic identification topic has led to an unstable confrontation as on the internal plan as in the international arena.
FULL TEXT Moldova: A Borderland's Fluid History (special issue of Euxeinos, St. Gallen University, Switzerland)
Igor Casu, Andrei Cusco, PD Dr Svetlana Suveica
Table of Contents Moldova: A Borderland‘s Fluid History Editorial by Diana Dumitru and Petru Negura 1812 and the Emergence of the Bessarabian Region: Province-Building under Russian Imperial Rule by Victor Taki, King’s University College, Edmonton 1878, Before and After: Romanian Nation-Building, Russian Imperial Policies, and Visions of Otherness in Southern Bessarabia by Andrei Cuşco, Moldova State University, Chișinău Between the Empire and the Nation-State: Metamorphoses of the Bessarabian Elite (1918) by Svetlana Suveică, Moldova State University, Chișinău From a ‘Liberation’ to Another. The Bessarabian Writers During the First Year of Soviet Power (1940-1941): Integration Strategies and Forms of Exclusion by Petru Negură, “Ion Creangă” State Pedagogical University, Chișinău How the Bessarabians Were Perceived by the Romanian Civilian-Military Administration in 1941 by Diana Dumitru, “Ion Creangă” State Pedagogical University, Chișinău ”The Quiet Revolution”: Revisiting the National Identity Issue in Soviet Moldavia at the height of Khrushchev’s Thaw (1956) by Igor Cașu, State University of Moldova, Chișinău 1991: A Chronology of Moldova’s Independence by Sergiu Musteaţă, ”Ion Creangă” State Pedagogical University, Chișinău Justifying Separatism: The Year 1924, the Establishment of the Moldovan ASSR and History Politics in the Transnistrian Moldovan Republic by Alexandr Voronovichi, “Ion Creangă” State Pedagogical University, Chișinău
Kamil Całus: In the shadow of history. Romanian-Moldovan relations. OSW Studies, No 53, September 2015
Centre for Eastern Studies (OSW)
Romania and Moldova have developed very strong ties, resulting mainly from many years of common history (including joint statehood), language and cultural heritage. On the one hand, this closeness fosters bilateral relations, but on the other hand it places a serious burden upon them. This is because Moldovan statehood and identity has in some way been built in opposition to Romanian statehood and identity. Part of Moldovan society (especially the Russian-speaking minority) fears closer cooperation with Bucharest, seeing it as threatening a loss of independence and the declaration of unification with its western neighbour. Historic sentiment is also reflected in Bucharest’s policy towards Moldova. Officially, relations with Chisinau are considered as exceptional, and representatives of the Romanian political class are full of declarations of assistance and support for their eastern neighbour, appealing to the national, cultural and linguistic community. In practice, however, Romanian policy towards Moldova (and hence also the two countries’ bilateral relations) is most often shaped not by sentiment but by political pragmatism, resulting among others from a desire to win the support of the Romanian electorate.
Euxeinos. Governance and Culture in the Black Sea Region
Moldova: A Borderland‘s Fluid History (special issue, coedited with Diana Dumitru)
2014 •
Petru Negură, Andrei Cusco, Sergiu Musteata, Igor Casu
This special issue of Euxeinos focuses on the historical transformation that occurred in a territory where various political and cultural influences met and mingled, and which today is known as the Republic of Moldova. Strongly influenced by the competing expansionist ambitions and “civilizing” missions of the powerful political entities that historically controlled this part of the world, the indigenous population was subjected to multiple cultural fractures and overlaying stratifications under Ottoman, Tsarist, Romanian, and Soviet dominance. Nine articles explore the history of this region through a selection of events, which arguably form a crucial timeline for the destiny of the populace inhabiting this land. When read in their entirety, these studies will assist the reader in scrutinizing the dense and curious history of this borderland zone and contemplating the metamorphoses of the locals’ identity.
In the shadow of history. Romanian-Moldovan relations
2015 •
Kamil Całus
Romania and Moldova have developed very strong ties, resulting mainly from many years of common history (including joint statehood), language and cultural heritage. On the one hand, this closeness fosters bilateral relations, but on the other hand it places a serious burden upon them. This is because Moldovan statehood and identity has in some way been built in opposition to Romanian statehood and identity. Part of Moldovan society (especially the Russian-speaking minority) fears closer cooperation with Bucharest, seeing it as threatening a loss of independence and the declaration of unification with its western neighbour. Historic sentiment is also reflected in Bucharest’s policy towards Moldova. Officially, relations with Chisinau are considered as exceptional, and representatives of the Romanian political class are full of declarations of assistance and support for their eastern neighbour, appealing to the national, cultural and linguistic community. In practice, however, Romania...