18 resultados para Russia. Armii a


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This chapter aims to expand the existing CSD literature by providing insights from current Russian CSD practice, which is believed to be an under researched area. The main objective here is to examine the extent of CSD in Russia. For this purpose content analysis of 2004 annual reports of 20 large companies which are listed on the Russian stock exchange was undertaken. The key findings show that 18 (90%) out of the 20 companies included in the study made some social and environmental disclosures. Employee related disclosures are the dominant category with 90% of companies making some form of disclosures in this category. In addition, 85% of companies made some form of environmental disclosures while only 55% of companies made ethical disclosures. According to this study, the quality of disclosure is generally poor due to lack of external verification and lack of completeness. Although it is more likely that in the future, pressures will be brought to bear on Russian companies to engage in more transparent and accountable CSD practice, still very little optimism for improvement can be expressed here. This is mainly due to lack of mandatory requirements for CSD in Russia and also to some extent due to the absence of strong NGOs and other pressure groups who can exert effective pressures on Russian companies to improve their CSD practice. © 2009 Springer Berlin Heidelberg.

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THE YOUTH MOVEMENT NASHI (OURS) WAS FOUNDED IN THE SPRING of 2005 against the backdrop of Ukraineâs â˜Orange Revolutionâ. Its aim was to stabilise Russiaâs political system and take back the streets from opposition demonstrators. Personally loyal to Putin and taking its ideological orientation from Surkovâs concept of â˜sovereign democracyâ, Nashi has sought to turn the tide on â˜defeatismâ and develop Russian youth into a patriotic new elite that â˜believes in the future of Russiaâ (p. 15). Combining a wealth of empirical detail and the application of insights from discourse theory, Ivo Mijnssen analyses the organisationâs development between 2005 and 2012. His analysis focuses on three key momentsâthe organisationâs foundation, the apogee of its mobilisation around the Bronze Soldier dispute with Estonia, and the 2010 Seliger youth campâto help understand Nashiâs organisation, purpose and ideational outlook as well as the limitations and challenges it faces. As such,the book is insightful both for those with an interest in post-Soviet Russian youth culture, and for scholars seeking a rounded understanding of the Kremlinâs initiatives to return a sense of identity and purpose to Russian national life.The first chapter, â˜Background and Contextâ, outlines the conceptual toolkit provided by Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe to help make sense of developments on the terrain of identity politics. In their terms, since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia has experienced acute dislocation of its identity. With the tangible loss of great power status, Russian realities have become unfixed from a discourse enabling national life to be constructed, albeit inherently contingently, as meaningful. The lack of a Gramscian hegemonic discourse to provide a unifying national idea was securitised as an existential threat demanding special measures. Accordingly, the identification of those who are â˜notUsâ has been a recurrent theme of Nashiâs discourse and activity. With the victory in World War II held up as a foundational moment, a constitutive other is found in the notion of â˜unusual fascistsâ. This notion includes not just neo-Nazis, but reflects a chain of equivalence that expands to include a range of perceived enemies of Putinâs consolidation project such as oligarchs and pro-Western liberals.The empirical background is provided by the second chapter, â˜Russiaâs Youth, the Orange Revolution, and Nashiâ, which traces the emergence of Nashi amid the climate of political instability of 2004 and 2005. A particularly note-worthy aspect of Mijnssenâs work is the inclusion of citations from his interviews with Nashicommissars; the youth movementâs cadres. Although relatively few in number, such insider conversations provide insight into the ethos of Nashiâs organisation and the outlook of those who have pledged their involvement. Besides the discussion of Nashiâs manifesto, the reader thus gains insight into the motivations of some participants and behind-the-scenes details of Nashiâs activities in response to the perceived threat of anti-government protests. The third chapter, â˜Nashiâs Bronze Soldierâ, charts Nashiâs role in elevating the removal of a World War II monument from downtown Tallinn into an international dispute over the interpretation of history. The events subsequent to this securitisation of memory are charted in detail, concluding that Nashiâs activities were ultimately unsuccessful as their demands received little official support.The fourth chapter, â˜Seliger: The Foundry of Modernisationâ, presents a distinctive feature of Mijnssenâs study, namely his ethnographic account as a participant observer in the Youth International Forum at Seliger. In the early years of the camp (2005â2007), Russian participants received extensive training, including master classes in â˜methods of forestalling mass unrestâ (p. 131), and the camp served to foster a sense of group identity and purpose among activists. After 2009 the event was no longer officially run as a Nashi camp, and its role became that of a forum for the exchange of ideas about innovation, although camp spirit remained a central feature. In 2010 the camp welcomed international attendees for the first time. As one of about 700 international participants in that year the author provides a fascinating account based on fieldwork diaries.Despite the polemical nature of the topic, Mijnssenâs analysis remains even-handed, exemplified in his balanced assessment of the Seliger experience. While he details the frustrations and disappointments of the international participants with regard to the unaccustomed strict camp discipline, organisational and communication failures, and the controlled format of many discussions,he does not neglect to note the campâs successes in generating a gratifying collective dynamic between the participants, even among the international attendees who spent only a week there.In addition to the useful bibliography, the book is back-ended by two appendices, which provide the reader with important Russian-language primary source materials. The first is Nashiâs â˜Unusual Fascismâ (Neobyknovennyi fashizm) brochure, and the second is the booklet entitled â˜Some Uncomfortable Questions to the Russian Authoritiesâ (Neskolâko neudobnykh voprosov rossiiskoivlasti) which was provided to the Seliger 2010 instructors to guide them in responding to probing questions from foreign participants. Given that these are not readily publicly available even now, they constitute a useful resource from the historical perspective.