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Muslim-State Relations in Russia

2016
The relationship between Muslims and the Russian/Soviet state differs significantly from that in both the Middle East and Western Europe. These differences result from the lengthy historical presence of Islam in Eurasia and its over two centuries long state management first by the Russian Orthodox empire, and then by the Soviet atheist state.
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Muslims in Russia and the Successor States

2019
Abstract The history of Muslim populations in Russia and other former republics of the Soviet Union is long and varied. In a Pew–Templeton poll conducted in Russia in 2010, 10 percent of respondents stated that their religion was Islam, while Muslims also make up a majority of the population in six post-Soviet republics: Azerbaijan ...
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Regional Distribution of the Muslim Population of Russia

Eurasian Geography and Economics, 2006
Drawing on the results of the 2002 population census in Russia, an American geographer examines the size and spatial distribution of ethnic groups classified as Muslim. Methods of classification and issues with enumerating the Muslim population and changes since the 1989 census are described and analyzed.
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Russia’s Muslims after the Collapse of Communism

2002
Despite the predictions of some Western experts, Islam and nationalism were not among the major factors behind the collapse of Communism and the break-up of the USSR.1 So, when in December 1991 the Soviet Union ceased to exist, the bulk of Soviet Muslims, with the exception of a small faction among the Chechens, Tatars, Uzbeks and Kazakhs, were ...
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Unfinished Revolution: The Muslim Press in Russia

Slavic & East European Information Resources, 2019
This paper traces the growth of the Muslim press in Russia, its consolidation, and its survival during the Soviet Period, followed by its revival in the early 1990s.
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Tsarist Russia and the Muslims of central Asia

1977
The Russian advance into the Kazakh steppes The Kazakhs originated as tribal groups which broke away from the hegemony of the Shaybanid, Abu'l-Khayr Khān, in about 870/1465-6, and fled to the Chu river in the Semirech'ye region, where they were protected by the khan of Mughulistān, Esen Bogha.
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Institute of Muslim Marriage in Imperial Russia

Право и государство: теория и практика, 2022
E.S. Kosykh, Yu. V. Bondarenko
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Russia's Muslims and Electoral Participation: A Comparative Analysis of Regional Patterns

Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations, 2014
Grigorii V Golosov
exaly  

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