Russian Analytical Digest
The Russian Analytical Digest is a bi-weekly internet publication jointly produced by the Research Centre for East European Studies (Forschungsstelle Osteuropa) at the University of Bremen, and the Center for Security Studies (CSS) at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich). It is supported by the Otto Wolff Foundation and the German Association for East European Studies (DGO). The digest draws on contributions to the German-language Russlandanalysen, the CSS analytical network on Russia and Eurasia, and the Russian Regional Report . The Russian Analytical Digest covers political, economic, and social developments in Russia and its regions, and looks at Russia's role in international relations.
© Forschungsstelle Osteuropa, Center for Security Studies (CSS), German Association for East European Studies (DGO)
Frequency:
Bi-weekly
Publisher:
Publications:
- No. 71: Russia's Economic and Security Relations with Central Asia
- No. 70: The North Caucasus Crisis
- No. 69: Internet Blogs
- No. 68: Russia-Georgia Relations
- No. 67: The Political Situation in Russia's Regions
- No. 66: US-Russian Relations
- No. 65: Russia and the Economic Crisis
- No. 64: Land Reform
- No. 63: Russia’s Oligarchs: Where Are They Now?
- No. 62: Russia’s National Security Strategy
- No. 61: Russia and the EU’s Northern Dimension
- No. 60: Political Trends in Russia
- No. 59: Russia's Judicial System
- No. 58: Russia's New Gas Projects
- No. 57: The Political Role of Russia’s Regions
- Russia's Energy Relations with its Caspian Neighbors
- No. 55: The Role of Russia in Europe’s Security Architecture
- No. 54: The Russian Economy in Crisis
- No. 53: The Russian-Ukrainian Gas Conflict
- No. 52: Russian Agriculture, Rural Social Issues
- No. 51: Chechnya and the North Caucasus
- No. 50: Social Movements and the State in Russia
- No. 49: How Russia Works: An Assessment of the Medvedev-Putin System
- No. 48: Russia and the Financial Crisis
- No. 47: The Russian Orthodox Church
- No. 46: Energy Efficiency
- No. 45: Russia and the Conflict in Georgia
- No. 44: Russia and Islam
- No. 43: Federalism
- No. 42: Russia's Restive Regions
- No. 41: Gazprom’s Foreign Energy Policy
- No. 40: Russia and the "Frozen Conflicts" of Georgia
- No. 39: Russian-Serbian Relations
- No. 38: The State of the Russian Economy
- No. 37: Social Reforms. The Funding of University Studies
- No. 36: The Putin Legacy
- No. 35: Russia's Health and Demographic Situation
- No. 34: Russian Business Expansion
- No. 33: Russia's New Energy Frontiers
- No. 32: Russia After the Duma Elections
- No. 31: Russia's Party System and the 2007 Duma Elections
- No. 30: Nuclear Proliferation
- No. 29: Russia and Central Asia
- No. 28: Political Opposition in Russia
- No. 27: Energy Sector Reform
- No. 26: Russia and the West
- No. 25: Russia's Asia Policy
- No. 24: Russia and WTO Accession
- No. 23: Russia and Global Warming
- No. 22: The North Caucasus
- No. 21: Russia in Political and Economic Country Ratings
- No. 20: Maritime Border Conflicts
- No. 19: Political Parties
- No. 18: Russia's Energy Policy
- No. 17: "Siloviki" in Politics - Russian Military Reform
- No. 16: Federalism
- No. 15: Russia's Relations to Poland and Belarus; The Issue of Kaliningrad
- No. 14: Nationalism
- No. 13: Russian-Georgian Relations
- No. 12: Russia's Chairmanship of the Council of Europe
- No. 11: Corruption
- No. 10: Death Penalty
- No. 9: Media
- No. 8: Business-State Relations
- No. 7: Migration
- No. 6: Trends in Russian Foreign Policy - Russia and Iran
- No. 5: Beslan - Two Years After
- No. 4: Russia and Belarus
- No. 3: The New NGO Law
- No. 2: Russia's New Counter-Terrorism Law
- No. 1: Gazprom, Liberal Politics, Elections

