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Volume XXXIII

2024 Next

Publication date: 21.11.2024

Licence: CC BY  licence icon

Editorial team

Statistical Editor Rafał Woźnica

Editor-in-Chief Mirella Korzeniewska-Wiszniewska

Editors Irena Stawowy-Kawka, Józef Łaptos, Orcid Artur Patek

Issue content

Słowa kluczowe: Library of Congress, subject headings, Dewey Decimal Classification, Eastern Europe, Central Europe, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Czechoslovakia, president of Czechoslovakia, philosophy of economics, Marxist economics, Romania, Japan, diplomacy, Bessarabia, Soviet Union, Hungary, geopolitics, Horthy, revisionism, attrition warfare, iron ore, oil refineries, Great Powers, Second World War, Romania, Poland, Soviet Union, Great Britain, France, Tripartite Negotiations, The Second World War, Polish-Romanian relations after 1956, foreign policy of Romania 1960–1965, Romania in the years 1956–1965, Romania facing the Soviet-Chinese conflict, Polish diplomacy in Romania after 1956, Polish foreign policy after 1956, Orthodox Church of Ukraine, Kyiv Patriarchate, Patriarchate of Constantinople, autocephaly, Tomos, Ukraine, Revolution on Granite, systemic transformation, generational conflict, Russian aggression, Russian-Ukrainian war 2014–2024, actor-network theory, realism / neorealism in international relations, The Balkans, international relations, wars, ethnic conflicts, great powers, the Great War, the Second World War, Upper Silesia, Bulgaria, Balkans, migrations, 19th century, armed forces, intelligence, Turkey, regions of power, theory of regional security complexes, Turkey, Bulgarian Turks, Turkish minority, Bulgaria, minority political parties, ethnic minorities, higher education policy, universities’ regulatory framework, dictatorship (Greek “Junta”), authoritarian regime, nationalistic ideology and policy agenda, censorship, suppression and violence, disciplinary, control & punishment practices, students’ activism, resistance and uprising, academic freedom, war in Yugoslavia, Balkans, Croatia, US diplomacy, Peter Galbraith, Dubrovnik, Raguza, Balkans, Ottoman Empire, “Dubrovnik duty”, Macedonia, Ilinden, idea of the state, collective memory, state-building, Yugoslavia, culture, East, West, influences, diplomacy, Digital China Initiative, China, New Silk Road (Belt and Road Initiative BRI or B&R), Huawei, Serbia, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, smart cities, Surveillance and Control system, Montenegro, EU enlargement to the Balkans, Milo Đukanović, Montenegro elections, Montenegro negotiations with the EU, Milojko Spajić