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BusinessWeek January 31, 2005 Jason Bush |
Pushing Back Against Putin Do Russian protests against the President's benefit cuts signal increasing instability? |
BusinessWeek October 3, 2005 Jason Bush |
Russia: Spreading The Oil Wealth Putin is vastly boosting social spending. Will that sidetrack economic reform? |
BusinessWeek March 8, 2004 Jason Bush |
Putin May Be Clearing A Path Toward Change Before Vladimir V. Putin's widely anticipated landslide reelection victory on Mar. 14, he dismissed his entire government on Feb. 24. |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Kranz & Bush |
Putin's Game Westerners think the Russian President is turning back the clock to its Soviet past. The reality is much more complicated. |
BusinessWeek February 28, 2005 Jason Bush |
Deciphering Putin Autocrat? Democrat? The truth is more complex |
BusinessWeek August 8, 2005 Jason Bush |
Patriotism And Putin Rock! To Russia's youth, the President embodies reform and longing for the superpower past. |
BusinessWeek December 13, 2004 Bush & Olearchyk |
Putin's Biggest Blunder Is the Russian president losing his touch? Once admired for his steely efficiency, Putin suddenly doesn't seem to be able to get anything right. |
BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 |
A Surprise Choice For Russian Premier Investors have reacted favorably to President Vladimir V. Putin's appointment of an obscure bureaucrat -- 53-year-old Mikhail Fradkov -- to the post of Russian Prime Minister. |
BusinessWeek June 6, 2005 Jason Bush |
How Putin May Hang On To Power Russian media are buzzing with speculation about who will replace President Vladimir Putin, and how the succession will come about. |
BusinessWeek November 24, 2003 Jason Bush |
Commentary: Can Putin Contain The Fallout? Despite the Yukos crackdown, Russian President Vladimir Putin is struggling to keep economic reform on track. |
BusinessWeek September 27, 2004 Jason Bush |
Putin's Russia: Is the Economy Next? There's no doubt the Russian President is trying to centralize all political power inside the Kremlin. Experts fear that he also may clamp down on free-market reforms. |
BusinessWeek July 11, 2005 Jason Bush |
How Russia Slid Backwards Kremlin Rising: Vladimir Putin's Russia and the End of Revolution by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser offers a persuasive case that Putin--and the KGB--have reimposed authoritarian rule. |
Finance & Development September 1, 2000 Andrei Nesterenko |
The Modernization Challenge Facing President Putin Having established and strengthened basic market and democratic institutions during the 1990s, Russia became an emerging market country that badly needs a modernization breakthrough. How can the government of President Vladimir Putin attain this goal? |
Chemistry World September 20, 2013 Laura Howes |
Reform of Russian Academy of Sciences passed Despite protests, the Duma, Russia's lower house of parliament, has approved controversial reforms to the Russian Academy of Sciences. |
Reason April 2008 Cathy Young |
After Putin As Vladimir Putin prepares to step down and orchestrate his succession, Russia continues to roll back freedom -- but not all the way back. |
Salon.com July 30, 2001 Jeffrey Tayler |
Soul brothers Journalists jeered, but President Bush was right when he made nice with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The former KGB agent talks tough, but he can't afford to fight missile defense... |
BusinessWeek December 12, 2005 |
Russia's Civic Groups May Face New Rules In Russia, a controversial new law to regulate nongovernmental organizations may be the latest example of President Vladimir V. Putin's efforts to centralize power and neutralize opposition. |
Reason April 2009 Cathy Young |
Unclenching the Fist U.S.-Russian relations in the age of Obama. |
BusinessWeek December 13, 2004 |
The Unraveling of Putin's Power The massing of thousands of Ukrainians to protest the rigged election of Putin-backed candidate Viktor Yanukovych as their next leader has dealt a telling blow in Moscow. |
BusinessWeek August 4, 2003 Paul Starobin |
Russia Five years after the great ruble crash, the economy is booming. But how much is Russia really changing? |
BusinessWeek November 10, 2003 Jason Bush in Moscow |
Russia: A Big Chill For Business? Putin's move against Khodorkovsky probably won't extend to others. |
BusinessWeek July 26, 2004 Jason Bush |
Murder Most Foul In Moscow The murder of Paul Klebnikov, 41, a U.S. citizen and editor of the recently launched Russian edition of Forbes, casts more doubt on Russia's commitment to a civil society. |
Chemistry World December 18, 2013 Eugene Gerden |
Controversial academy reforms suspended Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, has suspended controversial reforms of the country's science academy for at least a year after an outcry by scientists. |
BusinessWeek December 18, 2006 Maria Bartiromo |
A Death In London There are many people who are very happy with the current situation in Moscow, but many more who are unhappy. |
BusinessWeek September 20, 2004 Jason Bush |
After The Massacre: No Fast Fixes For Putin Liberals in Russia and the West say the Russian President should be doing more to stop the violence by negotiating a political settlement in Chechnya. But his options to end the violence are limited. |
Reason July 2007 Cathy Young |
The Good Czar Every day in President Vladimir Putin's Russia is a reminder that the window of freedom the country enjoyed in the Yeltsin era (and even, in some respects, in the tail end of the Gorbachev years) is closing. |
BusinessWeek December 20, 2004 Jason Bush |
The Bigger Gazprom Grows, the Further Russia Backslides Yugansk, the main production subsidiary of the troubled Russian oil company Yukos, looks almost certain to be acquired by Gazprom, Russia's giant state-dominated gas concern. If the deal goes through, serious market reform is endangered. |
BusinessWeek September 22, 2003 Jason Bush in Moscow |
Russia's Stock Market Is Full of Gas With prices up and fear of Kremlin meddling in business fading, investors are pouring into Russian stocks. Will it last? |
Reason October 2001 Cathy Young |
Soviet Reunion Russia's future is looking frighteningly like its past... |
Chemistry World February 24, 2015 Eugene Gerden |
Economic crisis to erode Russia's science base Russian government funding for scientific research will be cut by at least 10% this year, as part of a crisis plan recently unveiled. |
BusinessWeek July 21, 2003 Jason Bush |
Sizzling Growth Could Singe Russia's Economy Russia's economy has never looked healthier. Growth is spiking upward, inflation is falling, Russia's external trade and government finances are both in surplus, foreign debt is low, and foreign exchange reserves are mushrooming. It almost seems too good to be true. Perhaps it is. |
BusinessWeek March 22, 2004 John Rossant |
Continental Divides As EU expansion nears, relations with Russia are getting tense |
BusinessWeek June 4, 2007 Garry Kasparov |
Putin's Critics: A Web Strategy We are banned from TV, so activists put videos of rallies on YouTube. |
BusinessWeek July 31, 2006 Bush & Bianco |
Why Russians Love Gazprom--No Matter What The World Thinks The 800-lb. gorilla of gas is central to Putin's popularity and Russia's new swagger on the world stage. |
BusinessWeek November 28, 2005 Jason Bush |
After Putin, Who? Medvedev's promotion makes him front-runner for Russia's President, for now. |
BusinessWeek December 6, 2004 Jason Bush |
A Political Crisis Erupts In Ukraine Ukraine is in political turmoil after hundreds of thousands of demonstrators took to the streets of Kiev and other cities to protest the results of a hotly contested presidential election. |
BusinessWeek December 18, 2006 Jason Bush |
Russia: How Long Can The Fun Last? In Russia, consumers are flush and foreign investment is up. Then there's the government interference - and corruption. |
BusinessWeek February 28, 2005 |
Bush and Putin: Strains Are Showing While both governments are expected to remain pragmatic on a number of issues, their diverging visions could become the real problem |
Knowledge@Wharton January 15, 2003 |
Russia's Struggle for Competitiveness Is it safe to go back in the water for would-be investors in Russia? How far has Russia come? How far does it have to go? And what models will it follow? |
Salon.com July 20, 2000 Jeffrey Tayler |
Guilty as charged Russian oligarchs are being harassed and jailed in a crackdown that's raising eyebrows in the West. But most Russians thinks they're guilty -- just like everybody else. |
Salon.com August 21, 2000 Vivienne Walt |
Russians blast Putin as sub deaths revealed The botched, belated rescue mission rivets attention on the dismal state of the Russian military and the government's lingering love of secrecy. |
AskMen.com Ross Bonander |
5 Things You Didn't Know About Vladimir Putin Here are some things you may not have known about the current president of the Russian Federation. |
Chemistry World May 20, 2013 Eugene Gerden |
Petition calls for science minister to go A group of Russian scientists and members of the Russian Parliament has called on President Vladimir Putin to fire Dmitry Livanov, Minister of Education and Science, and to evaluate the rate of efficiency of reforms that are currently being conducted in the domestic science and higher education. |
Chemistry World September 19, 2013 Eugene Gerden |
Duma to review Russian Academy of Sciences reform On Tuesday and Wednesday, scientists and students met outside the Duma to protest the proposed reforms of the Russian Academy of Sciences, which have been undergoing further readings this week. |
BusinessWeek August 9, 2004 Jason Bush |
A Renaissance For Russian Science Student enrollments are up, and multinationals are chasing grads. However, without an influx of qualified teachers, Russian science may be living on borrowed time. |
BusinessWeek September 2, 2010 Arkhipov & Pronina |
Russia's Fires May Have Strengthened Putin State media have generated an image of engagement and compassion, and the Prime Minister may succeed in using the event to secure even more power. |
Reason January 2006 Cathy Young |
The Tsars Come Out A decade ago, Russia seemed to be traveling a bumpy road toward a liberal society. Today, the general consensus is that it's slouching toward some variety of authoritarianism. |
BusinessWeek August 13, 2007 Eamon Javers |
I Spy--For Capitalism Trident may be the only U.S. corporate-intelligence firm staffed by ex-KGB agents. |
CFO December 1, 2007 Janet Kersnar |
View from Europe: From Russia, No Love The Cold War might be over, but a chill wind threatens to blow through business between Russia and the West. |
Salon.com October 9, 2000 Jeffrey Tayler |
The end of the affair Russia's support for the ouster of Slobodan Milosevic reflects a desire to cut its losses, not a pro-Western change of heart... |