John B. Dunlop
John Barrett Dunlop is an American political scientist, an emeritus senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, an expert on Soviet and Russian politics from 1980s to the present.[1]
Bachelor's degree, magna cum laude, from Harvard University and master's and doctoral degrees from Yale University. National Fellow at the Hoover Institution in 1978–79.[1]
Books
- 2018: (With Vladimir Kara-Murza) The February 2015 Assassination of Boris Nemtsov and the Flawed Trial of His Alleged Killers
- 2012: The Moscow Bombings of September 1999: Examinations of Russian Terrorist Attacks at the Onset of Vladimir Putin's Rule
- 2006: The 2002 Dubrovka and 2004 Beslan Hostage Crises: a Critique of Russian Counter-Terrorism
- 1998: Russia Confronts Chechnya: Roots of a Separatist Conflict
- 1993: The Rise of Russia and the Fall of the Soviet Union
- 1985: The New Russian Nationalism
- 1983: The Faces of Contemporary Russian Nationalism
- 1976: New Russian Revolutionaries
- 1972: Staretz Amvrosy, Model for Dostoevsky's Staretz Zossima
gollark: Rust is significantly more Haskell-like and I like that.
gollark: I know.
gollark: Haskell would call them both types with different kinds, I think.
gollark: Go does not like abstraction.
gollark: Because lol no generics...
External links
- Inventory of the John B. Dunlop collection at the Online Archive of California
- Printed matter related to the disintegration of the Soviet Union, and to political conditions in post-Soviet Russia. Includes a 1968 official Soviet report (incomplete), summarizing results of the investigation of the All-Russian Social-Christian Union for the Liberation of the People.
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