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Event | Feb 24, 2023
Russia invaded Ukraine one year ago, February 24, 2023. Since then, we have been watching aghast at the violence unleashed. The Davis Center's panelists will help to clarify what the war has cost (or not cost) Russia and Putin, how Ukrainians have been united by a common cause and what Europe…
Event | Feb 24, 2023
PONARS Eurasia and the Petrach Program on Ukraine are hosting a virtual, 24-hour event recognizing one year since the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine and keeping momentum in support of Ukraine high.
Event | Feb 24, 2023
Join Russia Matters and the Monterey Initiative in Russian Studies for an online debate between Timothy Ash and Trita Parsi on the costs and benefits of the United States’ support for Ukraine.
Event | Feb 15, 2023
Join the Belfer Center’s Intelligence Project and Russia Matters Project for a half-day virtual conference on the shifting military, political, social and economic drivers that have re-shaped geopolitics one year on.
Event | Feb 07, 2023
Join the Brookings Institution for a set of discussions on the state of the conflict, how that might and should change in the coming year and the wider ramifications for international order and security.
Event | Feb 02, 2023
Join the Carnegie Endowment for an in-depth review of Germany’s foreign and defense policy changes and its impact on allies in the region and around the world.
Event | Feb 09, 2023
Join UPitt's Center for Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies for a talk that will shed light on the humanitarian impact of war, the disruption of global trade and the larger security implication for the Black Sea region and Europe.
Event | Feb 10, 2023
The Center for East Asia Policy Studies and the Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy and Technology at the Brookings Institution will host a webinar drawing on the findings from a project on great power competition between the U.S., China and Russia.
Event | Feb 16, 2023
Join Harvard's Davis Center for a book talk with Claire P. Kaiser, who argues that the postwar and post-Stalin era was decisive in the creation of a "Georgian" Georgia.
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