Librarian View
LEADER
04318cmm a22007455u 4500
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14428658
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20200730064136.0
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m f a u
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cr mn mmmmuuuu
008
190613s2007 miu fo a eng d
035
|a
(MiAaI)ICPSR04642
040
|a
MiAaI
|c
MiAaI
245
0
0
|a
Change and Stability in Russian Foreign Policy Elite Perspectives
|h
[electronic resource]
|b
Survey of Russian Foreign Policy Elites in Moscow, 2003-2004
|c
William Zimmerman, Natalia Yargomskaia
250
|a
2007-06-18
260
|a
Ann Arbor, Mich.
|b
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor]
|c
2007
490
1
|a
ICPSR
|v
4642
506
|a
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
516
|a
Numeric
500
|a
Title from ICPSR DDI metadata of 2019-06-13.
536
|a
National Council for Eurasian and East European Research
|c
819-9
506
|a
AVAILABLE. This study is freely available to ICPSR member institutions.
530
|a
Also available as downloadable files.
522
|a
Russia
522
|a
Global
520
3
|a
Part of the series Change and Stability in Russian Foreign Policy Elite Perspectives (begun in 1999), this data collection is the product of a fourth round of interviews completed by Russian foreign policy elites in the year 2004. Underlying the series has been an effort to identify and explain those foreign policy domains in which orientation to the domestic political system has played a major predictive role. This particular survey explored a number of issues relating to foreign policy, security problems, and international affairs. Respondents were asked for their opinions on several issues such as Russia's priorities with respect to national versus international interests, military intervention in international affairs, threats facing the country, Russia's relationship with the European Union, former Soviet republics such as the Ukraine and Belarus, and the influence of Western and Asian countries on Russia as a nation. Respondents also were asked questions pertaining to foreign policy, media, national security, military aid, national expenditure, individuals' rights, NATO, democracy, and Russia's foreign policy goals. The survey concluded with a number of socio-demographic questions including gender, year and place of birth, nationality, income, education level, and political and religious affiliations.Cf: http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04642.v1
505
0
|t
Dataset
567
|a
Russian foreign policy elites based in Moscow.
590
|a
Individual login required to download datasets.
590
|a
Access is available to the Yale community.
650
7
|a
constitutional rights
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
democracy
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
economic conditions
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
economic policy
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
elites
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
European Union
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
foreign relations
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
foreign policy
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
government elites
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
international relations
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
military intervention
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
NATO
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
national interests
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
political elites
|2
icpsr
650
7
|a
terrorism
|2
icpsr
653
0
|a
ICPSR VI.B. Elites and Leadership, Nations Other Than the United States
653
0
|a
IDRC III. Electoral Systems and Political Behavior
700
1
|a
Zimmerman, William
|u
University of Michigan
700
1
|a
Yargomskaia, Natalia
|u
European University at St.Petersburg
710
2
|a
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.
830
0
|a
ICPSR (Series)
|v
4642
852
8
0
|b
yulint
|h
None
|z
Online resource
852
8
0
|z
Online resource
856
4
0
|y
Online dataset
|u
https://yale.idm.oclc.org/login?URL=http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04642.v1
902
|a
Yale Internet Resource
|b
Yale Internet Resource >> None|DELIM|14432660
905
|a
online resource
907
|a
2019-06-14T14:09:53.000Z
946
|a
DO NOT EDIT. DO NOT EXPORT.
090
|a
yuldset
090
|a
yuldsetnum
300
|a
1 online resource
336
|a
computer dataset
|b
cod
|2
rdacontent
337
|a
computer
|b
c
|2
rdamedia
338
|a
online resource
|b
cr
|2
rdacarrier
655
7
|a
Data sets.
|2
lcgft
953
4
0
|a
http://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04642.v1