Abstract

There is a growing academic literature in the West concerning the origins and future of the ‘Russian diaspora’ (see Bremmer, 1994; Kolstoe, 1995; Melvin, 1994; Shlapentokh et al., 1994). This term refers to the 25 million ethnic Russians1 who have been displaced politically in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union, finding themselves resident in the new geopolitical space referred to as Russia’s ‘near abroad’.

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