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  • 越野 剛
    地域研究
    2014年 14 巻 2 号 75-91
    発行日: 2014年
    公開日: 2021/11/30
    ジャーナル フリー
  • 吉野 悦雄
    比較経済研究
    2006年 43 巻 1 号 25-37,95
    発行日: 2006/02/28
    公開日: 2009/12/03
    ジャーナル フリー
    ベラルーシ
    は「抑圧の独裁国」と呼ばれ,国際社会からは孤立している。しかし,生活水準は堅実に上昇し,GDPは高い成長率を保っている。国営企業の民営化もその半分を達成した。しかしその民営化は極めて特殊な方法を採用しており,株式会社化した後も国家の支配が及ぶようになっている。またロシアから貿易を通した多額の資金移動があり,これが経済を支えている。しかし一方で西側からの外国直接投資は経済発展にとって不可欠な要因である。
  • 福嶋 千穂
    東欧史研究
    2014年 36 巻 64-70
    発行日: 2014年
    公開日: 2019/06/15
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
  • 2012年ポーランド・ベラルーシ訪問記
    設楽 靖子
    コンラッド研究
    2013年 4 巻 46-61
    発行日: 2013年
    公開日: 2021/05/01
    ジャーナル フリー
  • 吉田 浩二
    日本放射線看護学会誌
    2020年 8 巻 2 号 122-127
    発行日: 2020/12/31
    公開日: 2020/12/31
    ジャーナル フリー

    医療や産業分野における放射線・放射性物質の需要が拡大する一方で、それらからの被ばくのリスクは益々増大する。看護職は医療や地域において、放射線被ばくを受けた患者や住民のケアを行うが、放射線教育が充実していないため、必ずしも放射線の知識を有しているわけではない。本稿では、過去に大規模な原子力災害を経験した

    ベラルーシ
    共和国の医療系大学を訪問し、放射線教育構築に向けた示唆を得たので報告する。

  • ―鉄道部門を中心に―
    服部 倫卓
    ロシア・東欧研究
    2019年 2019 巻 48 号 19-40
    発行日: 2019年
    公開日: 2020/05/30
    ジャーナル フリー

    In this study, I tried to survey economic effects of China’s Belt and Road Initiative on Russia and other Eurasian Countries as its transit nations. Economic effects can be categorized into ‘investment effects,’ ‘transport effects’ and ‘areal effects.’

    I found that ‘investment effects’ of BRI on the railway sector of Eurasian countries were rather limited. Few fulfilled projects include China Eximbank’s loan to finance construction of Kamchik railway tunnel in Uzbekistan, China Eximbank’s loan to finance electrification of Belarus’s railway and, though the details were unknown, China’s commitment to invest in establishing the special economic zone ‘Khorgos-Eastern Gate.’ Other investment projects on the list of prospective joint works by Eurasian Economic Union members and China, such as the Moscow-Kazan high-speed rail project, the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway project and the project to connect rail networks of Armenia and Iran, had not been materialized so far.

    As for ‘transport effects,’ thus far the most remarkable success story is the rapid growth of China Railway Express connecting China and Europe via Kazakhstan, Russia and Belarus by container trains, which is believed to bring about over 100 million US dollars of transit revenue annually to each of them. Companies from European regions of Russia and Belarus also begin to explore the Chinese market by virtue of China Railway Express, which may play some positive role in expanding non-resource, non-energy exports, a priority for Putin administration. One must, however, put it into consideration that according to balance of payment statistics railway service export revenue of the three countries is stagnating. In addition, China-Europe container transport is still dominated by maritime modal, not railway. Beijing plans to reduce subsidies by local governments to container trains, which also makes the future of China Railway Express uncertain.

    Lastly, we can regard the development of ‘Khorgos-Eastern Gate’ in Kazakhstan and the birth of industrial park ‘Great Stone’ in Belarus, both with investments from China, as typical cases of ‘areal effects,’ while the ambitious Moscow-Kazan high-speed rail project in Russia came to a deadlock because it needs larger investments and more complicated arrangements.

  • 舘 葉月
    東欧史研究
    2019年 41 巻 99-102
    発行日: 2019年
    公開日: 2022/06/09
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
  • 特集1「紅い戦争の記憶」によせて
    中山 大将
    地域研究
    2015年 16 巻 1 号 284-289
    発行日: 2015年
    公開日: 2021/11/30
    ジャーナル フリー
  • グローバリズム・リージョナリズム・ナショナリズム-21世紀における役割を模索するアジア-
    中井 和夫
    国際政治
    1997年 1997 巻 114 号 135-150,L13
    発行日: 1997/03/30
    公開日: 2010/09/01
    ジャーナル フリー
    The first Ukrainian state already has lasted five years. But it does not mean the end of long dreamed of statism, but the beginning of hard ways for building a nation.
    The border of Ukraine has a peculiar character. Almost all border lines were drawn by dividing regions, each of which comprised historically one region. This condition also makes the task of building a nation difficult.
    In the western part of Ukrainian border, such regions are Galitsia, Carpathian, Bukovina and Bessarabia. If you turn to the east, there are two divided regions, the Donbass and the Slobidska Ukraine.
    The Ukrainian border was made by dividing regions that caused difficulties in building the Ukrainian nation-state. Because of the dividing the regions automatically made Ukrainian Diaspora or irredenta outside Ukraine. In Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Moldova and Russia, Ukrainians have been living as a minority group. At the same time the opposite sides, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Moldova and Russia, consider the regions which were incorporated with Ukraine their irredenta. Between Ukraine and Russia there is another but major border dispute on the Crimean Peninsula.
    Ukraine herself is divided into two parts, Eastern and Western. The Western part of Ukraine, called Galicia, has some characteristics which are not seen in other parts of Ukraine.
    On the contrary to the Galicia, eastern and southern parts of Ukraine have different characteristics. The Donbass and Crimea belong to these regions. These regions have strong tles with Russia although they belong to Ukraine. The Crimea, now an autonomous republic in Ukraine, belonged to Russia until 1954. A part of the Donbass was belonged to Russia before the 1917 revolution as the Don Army District.
    The contrast between the West and the East in Ukraine can be seen on the map. There is an interesting piece of evidence to show the dichotomy between the West and the East. It shows the change of support for the first president Leonid Kravchuk and the second president Leonid Kuchma. In Ukraine we can hear a new Ukrainian proverb, saying, “Ukrainian Presidents born in the East will die in the West”. This proverb well explains the dichotomy between the East and the West in Ukraine.
    For Nation-building in Ukraine there are some obstacles in terms of integration of people into one consolidated group. Ukraine is divided not only by geography but also by culture and identity.
    Language problems may be the most visible problem in today's Ukraine. The second obstacle for the integration of the Ukrainian nation-state is religious splits among the people. Ukraine is, of course, a secularized state. But the history of the suppression of national churches such as the Uniate Church (Ukrainian Catholic Church) and Ukrainian Orthodox Church made these churches political factors.
    Ukrainians have failed to form a nation-state. Russians have also failed to form their own nation-state. Russians have always been a subject of a big empire, first the Russian Empire and next the Soviet Union. Above all things they carried out their mission to build and maintain an empire. Ukrainians, in contrast, are eager to build their own nation-state, not an empire. This is an identity difference between two nationalities. And this difference reflects the dichotomy in Ukraine between the East and the West.
    The geopolitical position of Ukraine in the International arena has been a factor of difficulties for the building a nation state. For Ukraine, located between the West and the East, between Germany and Russia, inevitably it has been geopolitically in either a buffer zone or a battleground. In the Northern War in 18th century, the Napoleonic War, Crimean War, World War I and World War II, Ukraine was one of the major battlefields. After the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union the region which includes the territory of Ukraine became a battlefield between Europe and Russia b
  • 山内 知也
    生物学史研究
    2015年 93 巻 7-32
    発行日: 2015/12/20
    公開日: 2019/06/03
    ジャーナル フリー
  • ―二つの忠誠心の間で―
    伊東 孝之
    ロシア・東欧研究
    2015年 2015 巻 44 号 5-28
    発行日: 2015年
    公開日: 2017/08/18
    ジャーナル フリー

    When World War 1 broke out, most of the nations in Eastern Europe identified themselves with the existing Empires. Poles were mobilized into the three Empires that divided them. They ran the risk of fighting against each other. Germans in the Russian Empire fought in the Russian army against Germany. As the war progressed, however, they became aware of their ethnic identity. They were discriminated against by the authorities or the populace of the ruling nationality. Or they were manipulated by the belligerent nations against the enemy.

    A lot of new states came into being in Eastern Europe after the war in the name of national self-determination. Most of them, however, were not “ethnic states” in the proper sense of the word. They included many citizens of different ethnicity. On the other hand, as a result of the Russian Revolution a state based on the completely new principle came into being: the Soviet Union. It adopted ethnicity as the constituting principle of the state and formed a federation of ethnic republics. Ethnic republics were, however, just on paper. There were no institutional arrangements that would promote citizens’ allegiance to the given republic. The all-mighty Communist Party of the Soviet Union is the institution that should secure citizens’ allegiance to the federal center. So long as the ideological mobilization worked, they managed to succeed in resurrecting citizens’ civic loyalty to the state as a whole.

    As the international tension mounted in the course of the 1930s, the Soviet leadership started to look with mistrust on national minorities on the periphery which resulted in the mass murder in Eastern Europe. The famine in 1932–33 in Ukraine was the first case. It was no natural, but man-made disaster to which 3.3 million people fell victim. It was caused by the excessive requisition of grain that the authorities forced through for the ambitious industrialization program. Ukraine had to pay a particularly heavy toll for it. Those who tried to resist were blamed for “Ukrainian nationalism” and “actions to serve the interests of the enemy”. Most of the victims of the so-called “Great Purge” in 1937–38 were citizens of national minorities in Eastern Europe. They were suspected to be spies for Japan in the case of the “Kulak operation” and for Poland in the case of the “Polish operation”. 625,000 people were incriminated and shot to death.

    During World War 2 Germans and Soviets did ethnic cleansing in a huge scale in Eastern Europe. Germans considered Eastern Europe as nothing more than suppliers of raw materials, foods and labor forces, and were not interested in integrating peoples there. They starved to death about one million inhabitants of Leningrad and 3.1 million soldiers of the Red Army most of whom were conscripted from Eastern Europe. 5.4 million East European Jews fell victim to the German extermination policy after July 1941. Soviets, on the contrary, were interested in integrating peoples they captured. However, they shot to death most of the elite who cooperated with the previous regime and exiled “enemy nationalities” en masse to Central Asia or Siberia. Beneath the German-Soviet war another ethnic cleansing unfolded: Ukrainian nationalists killed about one hundred thousand Poles and Jews in Volynia.

    (View PDF for the rest of the abstract.)

  • ―歴史の暗黒部分―
    中澤 孝之
    ロシア・東欧学会年報
    1996年 1996 巻 25 号 142-151
    発行日: 1996年
    公開日: 2010/05/31
    ジャーナル フリー
  • 中村 清吾
    昭和学士会雑誌
    2022年 82 巻 Supplement 号 s13-s19
    発行日: 2022年
    公開日: 2022/10/07
    ジャーナル フリー
  • CISの行方
    木村 汎
    国際政治
    1993年 1993 巻 104 号 1-15,L5
    発行日: 1993/10/10
    公開日: 2010/09/01
    ジャーナル フリー
    The disintegration of the Soviet Union was inevitable, since those three elements which had served to integrate the approximately 120 nationalities into one artificial entity, i. e., the U. S. S. R., had recently severely weakened its cementing functions. These were the threat from outside, the Communist ideology, and the organs which had supervised the enforcement of that ideology, i. e., the CPSU, KGB, and the Soviet armed forces. The first two cements had for long reduced its centripetal functions, and the third ones lost it through their badly organized August 1991 abortive coup attempt. When the Soviet Union collapsed, three choices existed: its reorganization into a loose form of federation, for example, the Union of Federation advocated by Gorbachev; the complete interdependence of the 12 republics; and the formation of the CIS. The main reasons why the 11 former republics chose the CIS option seems to be the following: (1) the 11 former republics found themselves unable to become economically independent for the time being, at least in the period right after the demise of the USSR, partly due to the heresy they inherited, namely economic reliance upon each other, which was the result of the Stalin's skillful application of the “socialist principle of divided labor.” (2) Even if these republics had decided to become completely independent, the chances were that they would not have been recognized as independent states, and hence nor admitted to such international organizations as the UN, IMF, CECS, by the U. S. and other important Western countries, which were greatly concerned with the proliferation of nuclear weapons and other undesirable consequences of the breakup of the USSR. (3) These former republics needed some sort of a mechanism or forum through which they could solve those mounting problems and issues which were left over with the sudden disintegration of the U. S. S. R.
    What is the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)? No one so far seems to have provided a definitive, satisfactory, clear answer to this question. It is understandable for the following three reasons. (1) The CIS is not necessarily a concept with a positive substantive content but rather a counter concept against the USSR, the Center and its personal embodiment, Gorbachev. (2) The leaders of the CIS participating member states hurriedly decided to build the CIS, without having any agreed-upon concept of that institution. (3) They interpret differently the CIS scheme, according to their own ideas and even wishful thinkings.
    As indicated above, the CIS thus contains, from the very beginning, the seeds of disagreements and even its own disintegration. Particularly, the following three constitute such a centrifugal element: (1) the sudden disappearance of the common enemy (the USSR, the center, Gorbachev), against which each constituent republic used to unite in the past; (2) different understanding or interpretation of the CIS scheme among CIS member states; (3) existence of potential and even actual seeds of contradictions, disagreements and cinflicts among CIS states with regard to their territorial boundaries, mother language tongue policies, and concern over the rise of Russian hegemonism.
    What will be the CIS's future? Three scenarios are likely to take place. The first is what one may call “Yugoslavianization, ” i. e., the disintegration of the CIS and the starting of the civil war between and within some CIS member states. This dreadful scenario has in part begun. The second is what one may call “block building”, i. e., CIS member states build close ties, mostly economic, with neighboring countries within and without the CIS. The third is an effort to reorganize the CIS in a more tight or loose fashion. One may conclude that a combination of all these three scenarios are simultaneously occurring now.
  • 小山 哲
    東欧史研究
    2008年 30 巻 20-38
    発行日: 2008年
    公開日: 2019/04/14
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
  • 本村 眞澄
    地域学研究
    2010年 40 巻 1 号 259-272
    発行日: 2010年
    公開日: 2010/07/10
    ジャーナル フリー
    The purpose of this paper is to describe the Russian pipeline policy and the counter-measures conducted by consuming countries, which provides a worthwhile lesson for Japan as a permanent energy importer. The nature of pipelines is to form a “natural monopoly” because of the huge investments required and superiority taking precedence against late comers. Russia, the second largest oil producer in the world, has constructed oil exporting networks to ports on the Baltic Sea and the Black Sea as well as an inland pipeline system to Eastern Europe, named “Druzhba”. The latter system has worked to keep Eastern Europe as an isolated economic realm separated from the western world, because this region can not afford to purchase crude oil from the international market due to a lack of hard currency.
    Russia also has plans to construct several new pipelines to not only cope with future oil demands but to expand transport capacities and access future oil markets. These new pipelines will make use of Russia's geographical characteristics to face the lucrative market of Europe and also the emerging market of Northeast Asia by expanding pipeline infrastructure. Among Russia's planned new pipelines there is a new oil supply system from East Siberia to the Pacific Ocean (ESPO) planned to access new markets in Northeast Asia. Construction has started from Taishet to Skovorodino, however China has been facing a difficulty to agree with Russia in constructing a cross-border oil pipeline from Skovorodino to Daqing because of a precaution by Russia over a so-called “hold-up problem” (making a pipeline to a single country makes the consuming country stronger aginst the supplying country). It is necessary for Russia to construct a dual supply system, i.e. one for the Pacific Ocean and the other for China (the Daqing Spur). Meanwhile, China finally reached agreement with Russia to construct a cross-border oil pipeline from Skovorodino to Daqing with a contribution of a $25B soft loan to Rosneft and Transneft, an example of the success of a difficult project through financial participation by the consuming country.
    Any pipeline eventually creates a political effect on production, transit and consuming countries, but pipelines are capital intensive infrastructures for which the decisions are made based on the economics and stabilities of operations, not on political effects. On the other hand, politics or consistent engagement by governments is a unique driving force to establish large scale infrastructures such as cross-border pipelines that will contribute to regional stability and prosperity.

    JFL Classification: N54, N74, N75
  • 村田 優樹
    ロシア・東欧研究
    2018年 2018 巻 47 号 17-34
    発行日: 2018年
    公開日: 2019/10/08
    ジャーナル フリー

    This article revisit Ukrainian political history in 1918, a year of turmoil, when three different states arose one after another in Kiev: the Ukrainian People’s Republic, the Ukrainian State, and the Directorate. In previous studies, this year is considered as an integral part of the history of the Ukrainian national movement, which struggled to defend the independence achieved by the fourth Universal (declaration) in January 1918 against foreign intervention. According to this national historical narrative, this effort ended in defeat when Ukraine was incorporated into the Soviet Union. In contrast to those studies, the present article claims that the future political status of Ukraine was not yet decided in 1918; not only an independent state, but an autonomous part of the Russian (con-)federation remained one of the political aims of the Ukrainian activists even after the fourth Universal, and that the development of the idea of the future state system of Ukraine considerably depended on the interests of foreign actors. Lacking sufficient military strength, all the Ukrainian states that formed in 1918 needed outside assistance for their own survival. This paper examines the close interrelationship between the choice of the future political status of Ukraine (independence or federation) and the ongoing foreign policy.

    After the October Revolution in Petrograd, both belligerent powers in World War I came into contact with various local governments in the former Russian imperial territory, aiming to take advantage of them for their own war efforts. The Entente desired the restoration of the strong Russian state as an ally, demanding incorporation of Ukrainian territory into the future federative Russia. The Central Powers, on the other hand, planned to construct a chain of buffer states between Germany and Russia for the security of German and Austrian eastern borders. This geopolitical consideration led to support for an independent Ukrainian state, as one such buffer state.

    At first, the leaders of the Ukrainian People’s Republic advocated the formation of the democratic federative Russia. Offered more generous support by Germany, however, they declared independence and signed a treaty with the Central Powers in Brest-Litovsk. This pro-German policy was inherited by the Ukrainian State, which replaced the People’s Republic in April 1918. In November, on the final defeat of the Central Powers, however, the Ukrainian State issued a statement that Ukraine should become an autonomous part of the restored federative Russia. The Directorate, the successor of the Ukrainian State, also adopted the pro-federation policy to gain support from the Allies, the winners of the Great War. Thus, the change of perspective on the state system accompanied the change of foreign policy.

    While the pro-Entente policy failed because of disagreements with Russian Whites, the flexible Ukrainians finally found a third power―the Bolsheviks. The oppositional socialist group in the Directorate received the status of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic as a de-jure sovereign polity within the Soviet Union. In this sense, the establishment of the Soviet Ukraine could not be seen only as a symbol of the defeat of the Ukrainian national movement; rather, it was more or less a product of the federative idea employed by the Ukrainian activists themselves in those revolutionary years.

  • 下斗米 伸夫
    ロシア・東欧研究
    2014年 2014 巻 43 号 21-42
    発行日: 2014年
    公開日: 2016/09/09
    ジャーナル フリー

    This essay traces on the evolvements of Russian political class over the issue of Ukraine from the demise of the USSR to 2014 crisis, culminating in the annexation of the Crimea peninsula. Russian attitudes towards the rebirth of Ukraine nationalism were ambiguous, especially among elite level.

    The August coup against the Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev took place in Ukraine, where its nationalistic elements were independent oriented, while the conservatives, including the military industrial complex were negative. After the December 1991 referendum, where opinions were in favor for independence, Leonid Kravchuk, once ideological secretary of the Ukraine communist party could rely on the support of the West oriented voice of western Ukraine, where European and Catholic influence was vocal. From the Russian point of view, this region was alien from the Orthodox tradition and was never been part of the Russian Empire. Thus, Ukraine as the nation state was weak and far from united as political identity was concerned. Economy was also divided between agrarian west and the east, where Soviet type of military industrial complex was dominant. This east-west divide caused political instability in Ukraine, that was revealed when Kravchuk was replaced by Kuchima who first relied on the support of Russian speaking east, though he eventually turned to the west.

    Moscow was particularly concerned the fate of the Black Sea fleet and Crimea, where Russians were dominant and never belonged to Ukraine until 1954, when Nikita Khrushchev, Ukrainian oriented Soviet leader changed the status of Crimea from Russia to Ukraine. Though Russian President Boris Yel’tsin was in favor for the Ukraine status quo, his nationalistic minded semi-oppositionists like Moscow Mayor Luzhkov were against the Ukraine position overt the fleet and Crimea. It was only pragmatism of Yevgeny Primakov, Foreign Minister, who could pass the bill on the partnership in 1997.

    New President Vladimir Putin was more oriented Russian nationalism, and was particularly against the color revolution, when western oriented President Yushchenko won over the East oriented Yanukovich in a 2004 election. East-West divide, coupled with the corruption and ungovernavility, became Kremlins worry on Ukraine. Still they succeeded in winning Yanukovich victory in the following election and could deal over the 25 years continuation of the Black Sea Fleet, in turn for cheaper gas supply in 2010.

    Ukraine thus became a grand over which domestic East-West divide was coupled by the influence of the NATO-EU and Moscow contested. The Maidan revolution was thus seen from Kremlins nationalists oriented policy makers to be an attempt to cut the influence of Russia over Ukraine. The Izborskii club or another religious-Orthodox oriented politicians were thus backing sudden policy changes of the President Putin, who took Maidan revolution as another attempt of regime change by the West, and eventually annexed the Crimea Peninsula. Thus, in turn, brought about the civil war situation, particularly in the east Ukraine, that was already uncontrolled by neither Moscow nor Kiev authority.

  • 鈴木 重周
    ユダヤ・イスラエル研究
    2018年 32 巻 115-
    発行日: 2018年
    公開日: 2021/05/09
    ジャーナル オープンアクセス
  • 浅岡 善治
    史学雑誌
    2006年 115 巻 5 号 992-997
    発行日: 2006/05/20
    公開日: 2017/12/01
    ジャーナル フリー
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