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Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever
Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases, 2007Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever is a tick-borne viral zoonosis with the potential of human-to-human transmission, affecting wide areas in Asia, Southeastern Europe, and Africa. Hemorrhagic manifestations constitute a prominent symptom of late stage disease with case fatality rates from 10% to 50%.
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Russian Social Science Review, 2016
The rapid shift in mass public opinion among Russians after the annexation of Crimea is usually attributed to the success of official state propaganda. This article asks how this success was achieved, given that the popularity of Putin's regime had been falling for several years while the opposition had been gaining strength. The war enabled the regime
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The rapid shift in mass public opinion among Russians after the annexation of Crimea is usually attributed to the success of official state propaganda. This article asks how this success was achieved, given that the popularity of Putin's regime had been falling for several years while the opposition had been gaining strength. The war enabled the regime
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Crimean?Congo hemorrhagic fever
Antiviral Research, 2004Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) is a tick-borne disease caused by the arbovirus Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV), which is a member of the Nairovirus genus (family Bunyaviridae). CCHF was first recognized during a large outbreak among agricultural workers in the mid-1940s in the Crimean peninsula. The disease now occurs sporadically
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Casualties of Conflict: Crimean Tatars during the Crimean War
Slavic Review, 2008During the Crimean War, Crimean Tatars were charged en masse with collaborating with the Allies. At the war's conclusion, nearly 200,000 Tatars left the peninsula to relocate in the Ottoman empire. Mara Kozelsky contributes to an understanding of this critical episode in the Crimean War by examining secret surveillance documents, a collection that ...
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Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics, 1996
Crimea has been characterized as a flashpoint for future European security and is both part of Ukraine's state‐building process and a specific case in itself. Ownership of the Black Sea Fleet is but one issue: inter‐ethnic relations (including the sensitive question of the position of the Crimean Tatars), economic and social factors (such as the ...
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Crimea has been characterized as a flashpoint for future European security and is both part of Ukraine's state‐building process and a specific case in itself. Ownership of the Black Sea Fleet is but one issue: inter‐ethnic relations (including the sensitive question of the position of the Crimean Tatars), economic and social factors (such as the ...
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Abstract The Crimean War was the greatest international crisis of the Victorian era, and a modern war of rifles, railroads, and telegraphs. As it raged, two writers embedded in the conflict–the young Russian officer Lev Tolstoy, and William Howard Russell, an Irish correspondent for The Times–brought the horrors of trench warfare home to
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2011
On 4 July 1854, Dumitru Bratianu addressed a memorandum to the British Foreign Secretary, Lord Clarendon, in which the Romanian diaspora protested against the Austrian occupation, which took effect in mid-August. Conservative Austria's involvement in the Eastern crisis was not to everybody's taste in Britain.
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On 4 July 1854, Dumitru Bratianu addressed a memorandum to the British Foreign Secretary, Lord Clarendon, in which the Romanian diaspora protested against the Austrian occupation, which took effect in mid-August. Conservative Austria's involvement in the Eastern crisis was not to everybody's taste in Britain.
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