Kategoriye göre sırala 'Russia' içeren 14 eklemeler menuAnahtar kelimeler aracılığıyla aramak için Academia (2)Access (17)Africa (6)Animal Rights (1)Anonymity (9)Arab Spring (5)Art (15)Article 19 (1)Atheism (1)Australia (4)Blasphemy (16)Blogger (5)Books (1)Brazil (4)Buddhism (2)Burma (2)Canada (3)Celebrity (5)Censorship (28)Charlie Hebdo (2)China (10)Christianity (13)Civility (33)Colonialism (1)Copyright (7)Corruption (3)Defamation (24)Democracy (20)Denialism (3)Denmark (2)Discrimination (9)Education (16)Egypt (3)Europe (4)Exclusion (1)Facebook (3)Film (1)France (6)Freedom (36)Gaza conflict (1)Genocide (3)Germany (9)Google (5)Governance (10)Hate speech (19)Hinduism (1)History (18)Homosexuality (5)Humour (3)Hungary (1)Hunger strike (1)India (11)Internet (43)Internet companies (1)Islam (21)Israel (1)Japan (2)Journalism (24)Kenya (2)Knowledge (26)Language (10)Latin America (6)Law (51)Lese majesty (1)Liberalism (13)Literature (6)Media (47)Memory laws (2)Middle East (8)Minorities (4)Money (13)Morality (8)Multiculturalism (10)National security (30)Net neutrality (12)Netherlands (3)New Zealand (1)Norway (1)Nudity (5)Occupy movement (1)Open source (2)Pakistan (4)Palestine (1)Piracy (2)Poland (3)Politics (54)Pornography (9)Power (56)Privacy (22)Protest (23)Public Morality (27)Race (1)Radio (2)Regulation (5)Religion (32)Reputation (19)Right to information (47)Russia (2)Satire (13)Saudi Arabia (1)Science (8)Scientology (1)Secrecy (1)Singapore (2)Social media (15)South Africa (5)Southeast Asia (2)Sport (1)Surveillance (2)Syria (1)Technology (20)Terrorism (6)Thailand (1)Turkey (11)Twitter (8)Ukraine (1)United Kingdom (11)United States (16)Violence (28)Whistleblowing (3)Wikileaks (1)Wikipedia (2)YouTube (1) Arseny Bobrovsky talks about his weird and wonderful @KermlinRussia parody Twitter account Arseny Bobrovksy of the parody account Kermlin Russia, talks to Helen Haft about self-censorship in Russia. Russia: ‘The Church has an enemy in every home.’ It’s television. Helen Haft explains how the Orthodox Church has eroded freedom of the media and lobbied for the 2013 law against offending religious feelings. Nobel Laureate Svetlana Alexievich: How does the ‘Red Man’ understand free speech? Nobel Prize Laureate Svetlana Alexievich talks to Free Speech Debate about her career, which has chronicled the lives of ordinary people after the collapse of the Soviet Union. ‘We need more hell’: Russian free speech and the market of attention Maksim Orlov explores how free speech is not enough for effective communication. Peter Pomerantsev: How important is television to free speech in Russia? Peter Pomerantsev speaks to Declan Johnston about free speech in Russia and the role of Russian television. The world through the eyes of Russian state television Robert Coalson looks at how Russian television depicts everything from the crisis in Ukraine to the war in Syria. Vladimi Pozner: Why Russia does not have a concept of free speech Famous Russian journalist Vladimir Pozner says he thinks Russia really has no concept of free speech. Oh, but there’s one place where you do have complete freedom of expression. In defence of whistleblowing Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern has been an outspoken defender of whistleblowers and alternative media sources. Jesus Christ Superstar? Not in Rostov, Russia The Russian parliament’s vote in support of a declaration against acts offending religious sentiments is symptomatic of worrying trends, write Olga Shvarova and Dominic Burbidge. Should Russian speakers be obliged to learn Estonian? FSD’s Olga Shvarova criticises the language-based discrimination ethnic Russians face in Estonia. The Kremlin’s grip tightens on Russia’s answer to Facebook Russian social network VK launched six years ago and has since attracted 122 million users. But as Olga Shvarova explains, political and copyright crackdowns are limiting the free flow of information and ideas its users once enjoyed. Russia’s convergence of church and state Olga Shvarova argues that Russian officials used the Orthodox Church as a political pawn to reinforce their own power during the Pussy Riot trial. Pussy Riot, Putin’in Rusyası ve Ortodoks Kilisesi Punk grubu Pussy Riot’ın, Moskova’da bir kilisede gerçekleştirdiği Putin karşıtı gösteri ‘‘din nefreti yayan bir tür holiganlık’’ mıydı, yoksa siyasi bir başkaldırının sanatsal bir formu muydu? Olga Shvarova bu olayı ele alıyor. Rus ‘ajanı’ olayı Casusluk yapmaktan 15 yıla mahkum edilen Rus nükleer araştırmacısı Igor Sutyagin, 2010 yılında kendini bir casus değiş-tokuş anlaşmasının tam ortasında buluverdi. Olga Shvarova yazıyor.
Arseny Bobrovsky talks about his weird and wonderful @KermlinRussia parody Twitter account Arseny Bobrovksy of the parody account Kermlin Russia, talks to Helen Haft about self-censorship in Russia.
Russia: ‘The Church has an enemy in every home.’ It’s television. Helen Haft explains how the Orthodox Church has eroded freedom of the media and lobbied for the 2013 law against offending religious feelings.
Nobel Laureate Svetlana Alexievich: How does the ‘Red Man’ understand free speech? Nobel Prize Laureate Svetlana Alexievich talks to Free Speech Debate about her career, which has chronicled the lives of ordinary people after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
‘We need more hell’: Russian free speech and the market of attention Maksim Orlov explores how free speech is not enough for effective communication.
Peter Pomerantsev: How important is television to free speech in Russia? Peter Pomerantsev speaks to Declan Johnston about free speech in Russia and the role of Russian television.
The world through the eyes of Russian state television Robert Coalson looks at how Russian television depicts everything from the crisis in Ukraine to the war in Syria.
Vladimi Pozner: Why Russia does not have a concept of free speech Famous Russian journalist Vladimir Pozner says he thinks Russia really has no concept of free speech. Oh, but there’s one place where you do have complete freedom of expression.
In defence of whistleblowing Former CIA analyst Ray McGovern has been an outspoken defender of whistleblowers and alternative media sources.
Jesus Christ Superstar? Not in Rostov, Russia The Russian parliament’s vote in support of a declaration against acts offending religious sentiments is symptomatic of worrying trends, write Olga Shvarova and Dominic Burbidge.
Should Russian speakers be obliged to learn Estonian? FSD’s Olga Shvarova criticises the language-based discrimination ethnic Russians face in Estonia.
The Kremlin’s grip tightens on Russia’s answer to Facebook Russian social network VK launched six years ago and has since attracted 122 million users. But as Olga Shvarova explains, political and copyright crackdowns are limiting the free flow of information and ideas its users once enjoyed.
Russia’s convergence of church and state Olga Shvarova argues that Russian officials used the Orthodox Church as a political pawn to reinforce their own power during the Pussy Riot trial.
Pussy Riot, Putin’in Rusyası ve Ortodoks Kilisesi Punk grubu Pussy Riot’ın, Moskova’da bir kilisede gerçekleştirdiği Putin karşıtı gösteri ‘‘din nefreti yayan bir tür holiganlık’’ mıydı, yoksa siyasi bir başkaldırının sanatsal bir formu muydu? Olga Shvarova bu olayı ele alıyor.
Rus ‘ajanı’ olayı Casusluk yapmaktan 15 yıla mahkum edilen Rus nükleer araştırmacısı Igor Sutyagin, 2010 yılında kendini bir casus değiş-tokuş anlaşmasının tam ortasında buluverdi. Olga Shvarova yazıyor.