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  1.  86
    Gender studies in post-soviet society: Western frames and cultural differences.Anna Temkina & Elena Zdravomyslova - 2003 - Studies in East European Thought 55 (1):51-61.
    This article is devoted to theexploration of some trends in gender studies incontemporary Russia and is based on ourresearch and teaching in the field over thecourse of seven years. The main concepts ofgender research – gender, feminism,women's subjectivity – were introduced to theRussian public early in 1990s; Russian genderstudies began to develop as a whole due to theapplication of Western concepts and theories.The article examines the growth of genderstudies over the last 10 years, contextualdifferences as well as theoretical approachesin Russian (...)
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    Using maternity capital: Citizen distrust of Russian family policy.Elena Zdravomyslova, Anna Temkina, Anna Rotkirch & Ekaterina Borozdina - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (1):60-75.
    During the last decade Russian politics have aimed at stimulating the birth rate, most famously by the maternity capital program. This article provides results from the first extensive study of citizen use and attitudes to this benefit and concludes that Russian women and families harbor a deep distrust of the program and Russian social policy, as it sends contradictory messages combining paternalistic and liberal trends. Many eligible mothers have not activated their capital due to various bureaucratic obstacles they encounter. Contrary (...)
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    Who Helps the Degraded Housewife?: Comments on Vladimir Putin's Demographic Speech.Elena Zdravomyslova, Anna Temkina & Anna Rotkirch - 2007 - European Journal of Women's Studies 14 (4):349-357.
    This article analyses the new demographic programme that was announced by the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, in 2006. The main goal of this programme is to encourage fertility, especially the birth of a second child. New benefits should elevate the status of wome taking maternity leave, who might otherwise suffer from discrimination in the family. The housewife is considered to be dependent and `degraded'. We argue that this demographic politics recalls continuity with soviet gender politics centred on the support of (...)
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