|
|
|
ABOUT EAST VIEW PRESS
East View Press is the journal and book publishing division of East View Information Services and its related company, East View Cartographic. Currently we publish five periodicals in order to serve researchers and others interested in major international and public policy questions, especially as they relate to the geographic area of the former Soviet Union and its surroundings. In addition, East View Press occasionally publishes books, also targeted for researchers, dealing with international security, Slavic studies, geography and mapping.
Regardless of format, East View Press has the mission of adding special value (usually by translation into English) to authoritative source materials in order to make them available to the widest possible audience globally. Since 1989 the East View companies have uncovered and distributed an amazing collection of key vernacular-language materials from countries all over the world. The overwhelming majority of these publications still remain inaccessible to end-users who do not read the languages in which they are written. So, the responsibility of East View Press is to selectively bring forward, reformat, translate and publish these valuable materials. Our strongest motivation is to provide information which helps researchers and analysts in the international and public policy fields.
|
|
|
FEATURED CONTENT
 |
Sergey Lavrov: Perpetual Reset Means a Glitch in the System
|
 |
Russian Muslims and the "Arab Spring"
|
From the Archives:
 |
National Archetypes of Russia's Foreign Policy (No. 2, 2009)
|
 |
The Secrets of Zhongnanhai: Who Wiretapped Mao Zedong, and How?
|
From the Archives:
 |
Territory-Specific Behavior in Russia's Far East: Economic and Sociological Analysis (No. 1, 2008)
|
 |
Information Technology Applied to Forecast Development Trends in International Conflicts
|
From the Archives:
 |
Russia and Challenges of the 21st Century (No. 2, 2009)
|
 |
Addressing the Nationalities Issue in the North Caucasus
|
From the Archives:
 |
(Book Review)The Fates of the Academic Elite: Russian Slav Studies, 1917-Early 1930s (No. 1, 2007)
|
|
|