Civil Society
Ukrainian academic Elena Davlikanova and Russian anti-war opposition politician Lyubov Sobol discuss the domestic opponents of Vladimir Putin.
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October 5, 2023
Iran Suppresses the Protests But Not the Anger
A year after the death of Mahsa Amini, the Islamic Republic has largely managed to end street protests but is unable to control the fury behind them.
October 5, 2023
Behind the Lines: Russia’s ‘Adoption’ Campaign in Occupied Ukraine
Moscow is encouraging the adoption of war ravaged towns and regions in Ukraine by their Russian counterparts, as it tries to build links with the occupied territories.
October 4, 2023
‘I Don’t Want Toys, I Want Daddy’ — Mariupol’s Forgotten Defenders
Some of those who fought in Ukraine’s 12-week-long siege are rightly celebrated as heroes, but not everyone is being remembered.
October 2, 2023
Russia’s Opposition in Exile Must Speak Out
For generations, Russians have had to leave their country to escape political repression, and many have built opposition movements abroad. Where are their voices today?
September 26, 2023
Key Conversation: Dora Chomiak
Dora Chomiak, CEO of Razom for Ukraine and Elina Beketova sit down at the 2023 CEPA Forum to unpack Razom for Ukraine’s mission to provide vital assistance to Ukrainians.
September 22, 2023
Speaking Truth Unto Russia — Inspiration From the Cold War
The need to reach ordinary Russians is as acute now as it was in the Cold War. We must generate new thinking and new methods to replicate past US success.
September 22, 2023
They May Wobble in the West, But Not in Ukraine
All the talk of fading US commitment to Ukraine’s war of national survival has no effect whatsoever among my embattled people. We fight on, regardless.
September 22, 2023
Russia’s Bonfire of the Nationalities Fuels Ukraine Conflagration
Why don’t Russians rise up against their rulers in the Kremlin, given the brutal losses of war? There are clues in analysis of the military casualty numbers, and in the budget.
September 21, 2023
Behind the Lines: Teaching Crimeans to Speak Ukrainian Again
Children educated in Crimea since its illegal annexation will soon graduate, and most won’t have studied Ukrainian. How will they be integrated into the Ukrainian-speaking mainland after liberation?