Обложка журнала
Title (English)
POSTCOLONIALISM AND MODERNITY
Language of publication
Russian, English
ISSN
2949-1711 (print)
Periodicity (English)

4 issues per year

Russian science citation index:
Yes

Ethics of scientific publications

The section was prepared based on the materials of the publishing house of scientific and medical literature Elsevier, as well as on the materials of the International Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)

Introduction

1.1. Publication of materials in peer-reviewed journals is not only a simple way of scientific communication, but also makes a significant contribution to the development of the relevant field of scientific knowledge. Thus, it is important to set standards for the future ethical behavior of all parties involved in the publication, namely: Authors, Editors of the journal, Reviewers, Publisher and Scientific Society for the journal "Postcolonialism and Modernity".

1.2. The publisher not only supports scientific communication and invests in this process, but is also responsible for following all modern recommendations in the published work.

1.3. The publisher is committed to the strictest supervision of scientific materials. Our journal programs provide an impartial "report" of the development of scientific thought and research, so we are also aware of the responsibility for the proper presentation of these "reports", especially in terms of the ethical aspects of the publications outlined in this document.

2. Responsibilities of Editors

2.1. Publication decision

The editor of the scientific journal Postcolonialism and Modernity is personally and independently responsible for making the decision to publish, often in cooperation with the relevant Scientific Society. The credibility of the work in question and its scientific significance should always underlie the decision to publish. The editor may be subject to the policies of the Editorial Board of Postcolonialism and Modernity, being limited by current legal requirements regarding defamation, copyright, legality and plagiarism.

The Editor may confer with other Editors and Reviewers (or officers of the Scientific Society) during the decision to publish.

2.2. Decency

The editor must evaluate the intellectual content of manuscripts regardless of the race, gender, sexual orientation, religious beliefs, origin, citizenship or political preferences of the Authors.

2.3. Confidentiality

The Editor and Editorial Board of Postcolonialism and Modernity are required not to unnecessarily disclose information about an accepted manuscript to anyone other than Authors, Reviewers, prospective Reviewers, other academic advisors, and the Publisher.

2.4. Disclosure Policy and Conflicts of Interest

2.4.1 Unpublished data obtained from submitted manuscripts cannot be used in personal research without the written consent of the Author. Information or ideas obtained during the review and related to possible benefits must be kept confidential and not used for personal gain.

2.4.2 Editors should recuse themselves from reviewing manuscripts (namely: request a Co-Editor, Assistant Editor, or cooperate with other members of the Editorial Board when reviewing work instead of personally reviewing and making a decision) in case of conflicts of interest due to competitive, collaborative and other interactions and relationships with Authors, companies, and possibly other organizations associated with the manuscript.

2.5. Publication oversight

An editor who provides compelling evidence that a statement or conclusion presented in a publication is erroneous should notify the Publisher (and/or the relevant Scientific Society) for prompt notification of changes, withdrawals, concerns, and other relevant statements. .

2.6. Research engagement and collaboration

The Editor, in conjunction with the Publisher (or the Scientific Society), shall take appropriate action in the event of ethical claims regarding reviewed manuscripts or published materials. Such measures generally include interaction with the Authors of the manuscript and the argumentation of the corresponding complaint or requirement, but may also involve interaction with relevant organizations and research centers.

3. Responsibilities of Reviewers

3.1. Influence on the decisions of the Editorial Board

Peer review helps the Editor make the decision to publish and, through appropriate interaction with Authors, can also help the Author improve the quality of the work. Peer review is a necessary link in formal scientific communications, located at the very "heart" of the scientific approach. The publisher shares the view that all scholars who wish to contribute to a publication are required to do substantial peer review work.

3.2. diligence

Any selected Reviewer who feels insufficiently qualified to review a manuscript, or who does not have enough time to complete the work quickly, should notify the Editor of Postcolonialism and Modernity and request that they be excluded from the review process of the corresponding manuscript.

3.3. Confidentiality

Any manuscript received for peer review must be treated as a confidential document. This work may not be opened or discussed with anyone not authorized to do so by the Editor.

3.4. Manuscript requirements and objectivity

The reviewer is obliged to give an objective assessment. Personal criticism of the Author is unacceptable. Reviewers should clearly and reasonably express their opinion.

3.5. Recognition of primary sources

Reviewers should identify significant published work that is relevant to the topic and not included in the bibliography of the manuscript. For any statement (observation, conclusion or argument) published earlier, the manuscript must have a corresponding bibliographic reference. The Reviewer should also draw the attention of the Editor to the discovery of significant similarities or coincidences between the manuscript in question and any other published work that is within the scope of the Reviewer's scientific competence.

3.6. Disclosure Policy and Conflicts of Interest

3.6.1 Unpublished data obtained from submitted manuscripts cannot be used in personal research without the written consent of the Author. Information or ideas obtained during the review and related to possible benefits must be kept confidential and not used for personal gain.

3.6.2. Reviewers should not participate in the review of manuscripts in case of conflicts of interest due to competitive, joint and other interactions and relationships with any of the Authors, companies or other organizations associated with the submitted work.

4. Responsibilities of Authors

4.1. Manuscript Requirements

4.1.1 Authors of original research reports should provide credible results of the work done, as well as an objective discussion of the significance of the research. The data underlying the work must be accurately presented. The work must contain sufficient details and bibliographic references for possible reproduction. False or knowingly erroneous statements are perceived as unethical behavior and are unacceptable.

4.1.2. Reviews and scientific articles must also be accurate and objective, the point of view of the Editors must be clearly indicated.

4.2. Data access and storage

Raw data relevant to a manuscript may be requested from Authors for review by Editors. Authors should be prepared to provide public access to this kind of information (according to the ALPSP-STM Statement on Data and Databases), if feasible, and in any case be prepared to retain this data for an adequate period of time after publication.

4.3. Originality and plagiarism

4.3.1 Authors must ensure that the work presented is entirely original and, in the case of using works or statements of other Authors, must provide appropriate bibliographic references or excerpts.

4.3.2 Plagiarism can exist in many forms, from presenting someone else's work as the author's, to copying or paraphrasing significant parts of someone else's work (without attribution) to claiming one's own rights to the results of someone else's research. Plagiarism in all forms is unethical and is unacceptable.

4.4. Plurality, redundancy and simultaneity of publications

4.4.1 In general, an Author should not publish a manuscript mostly devoted to the same research in more than one journal as an original publication. Submitting the same manuscript to more than one journal at the same time is perceived as unethical behavior and is unacceptable.

4.4.2. In general, the Author should not submit a previously published article for consideration to another journal.

4.4.3. Publishing a certain type of article (eg, clinical practice guidelines, translated articles) in more than one journal is ethical in some cases, subject to certain conditions. Authors and Editors of interested journals must agree to a secondary publication presenting necessarily the same data and interpretations as in the primary published work.

A bibliography of the primary work should also be included in the second publication. More information on acceptable forms of secondary (repeated) publications can be found at www.icmje.org.

4.5. Recognition of primary sources

The contribution of others must always be acknowledged. Authors should cite publications that are relevant to the performance of the submitted work. Data obtained privately, for example, in the course of a conversation, correspondence or discussion with third parties, should not be used or presented without the express written permission of the original source. Information obtained from confidential sources, such as evaluation of manuscripts or awards of grants, should not be used without the express written permission of the Authors of the work related to confidential sources.

4.6. Publication authorship

4.6.1 The authors of the publication can only be persons who have made a significant contribution to the formation of the concept of the work, the development, execution or interpretation of the presented research. All those who have made significant contributions should be designated as Contributors. Where research participants have made significant contributions in a particular area of research project, they should be listed as having made significant contributions to the research.

4.6.2. The author must make sure that all participants who have made a significant contribution to the study are presented as Co-Authors and are not listed as Co-Authors those who did not participate in the study, that all Co-Authors have seen and approved the final version of the work and agreed to submit it for publication.

4.8. Disclosure Policy and Conflicts of Interest

4.8.1 All Authors are required to disclose in their manuscripts financial or other existing conflicts of interest that may be perceived as affecting the results or conclusions presented in the work.

4.8.2 Examples of potential conflicts of interest that must be disclosed include employment, consulting, stock ownership, royalties, expert opinions, patent applications or patent registrations, grants, and other financial support. Potential conflicts of interest should be disclosed as early as possible.

4.9. Significant errors in published works

If the Author finds significant errors or inaccuracies in the publication, the Author must inform the Editor of the journal "Postcolonialism and Modernity" and interact with the Editor in order to withdraw the publication or correct errors as soon as possible. If the Editor or the Publisher receives information from a third party that the publication contains significant errors, the Author is obliged to withdraw the work or correct the errors as soon as possible.

5. Responsibilities of the Publisher

5.1 The Publisher shall follow policies and procedures that promote the ethical responsibilities of the Editors, Reviewers and Authors of Postcolonialism and Modernity in accordance with these requirements. The Publisher must be sure that the potential profit from advertising or reprint production does not influence the Editors' decisions.

5.2. The Publisher should support the Editors of Postcolonialism and Modernity in dealing with ethical concerns about published material, and should assist in dealing with other journals and/or Publishers if this facilitates the performance of the Editors' duties.

5.3. The publisher should promote good research practice and implement industry standards to improve ethical guidelines, withdrawal procedures, and error correction.

5.4 The publisher must provide appropriate specialized legal support (opinion or advice) if necessary.

Publication in the journal is free for authors.

The editors do not charge authors for the preparation, placement and printing of materials.

Dolgov Boris  — Editor-in-chief
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences (Europe and America Division, Leading Researcher)
doctor of historical sciences
Russian Federation
Vanteevskiy Makar  — Executive Secretary
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences (Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, Junior Research Fellow)
Russian Federation
Publisher
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences
Founder
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences

Ethics of scientific publications

The section was prepared based on the materials of the publishing house of scientific and medical literature Elsevier, as well as on the materials of the International Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)

Introduction

1.1. Publication of materials in peer-reviewed journals is not only a simple way of scientific communication, but also makes a significant contribution to the development of the relevant field of scientific knowledge. Thus, it is important to set standards for the future ethical behavior of all parties involved in the publication, namely: Authors, Editors of the journal, Reviewers, Publisher and Scientific Society for the journal "Postcolonialism and Modernity".

1.2. The publisher not only supports scientific communication and invests in this process, but is also responsible for following all modern recommendations in the published work.

1.3. The publisher is committed to the strictest supervision of scientific materials. Our journal programs provide an impartial "report" of the development of scientific thought and research, so we are also aware of the responsibility for the proper presentation of these "reports", especially in terms of the ethical aspects of the publications outlined in this document.

2. Responsibilities of Editors

2.1. Publication decision

The editor of the scientific journal Postcolonialism and Modernity is personally and independently responsible for making the decision to publish, often in cooperation with the relevant Scientific Society. The credibility of the work in question and its scientific significance should always underlie the decision to publish. The editor may be subject to the policies of the Editorial Board of Postcolonialism and Modernity, being limited by current legal requirements regarding defamation, copyright, legality and plagiarism.

The Editor may confer with other Editors and Reviewers (or officers of the Scientific Society) during the decision to publish.

2.2. Decency

The editor must evaluate the intellectual content of manuscripts regardless of the race, gender, sexual orientation, religious beliefs, origin, citizenship or political preferences of the Authors.

2.3. Confidentiality

The Editor and Editorial Board of Postcolonialism and Modernity are required not to unnecessarily disclose information about an accepted manuscript to anyone other than Authors, Reviewers, prospective Reviewers, other academic advisors, and the Publisher.

2.4. Disclosure Policy and Conflicts of Interest

2.4.1 Unpublished data obtained from submitted manuscripts cannot be used in personal research without the written consent of the Author. Information or ideas obtained during the review and related to possible benefits must be kept confidential and not used for personal gain.

2.4.2 Editors should recuse themselves from reviewing manuscripts (namely: request a Co-Editor, Assistant Editor, or cooperate with other members of the Editorial Board when reviewing work instead of personally reviewing and making a decision) in case of conflicts of interest due to competitive, collaborative and other interactions and relationships with Authors, companies, and possibly other organizations associated with the manuscript.

2.5. Publication oversight

An editor who provides compelling evidence that a statement or conclusion presented in a publication is erroneous should notify the Publisher (and/or the relevant Scientific Society) for prompt notification of changes, withdrawals, concerns, and other relevant statements. .

2.6. Research engagement and collaboration

The Editor, in conjunction with the Publisher (or the Scientific Society), shall take appropriate action in the event of ethical claims regarding reviewed manuscripts or published materials. Such measures generally include interaction with the Authors of the manuscript and the argumentation of the corresponding complaint or requirement, but may also involve interaction with relevant organizations and research centers.

3. Responsibilities of Reviewers

3.1. Influence on the decisions of the Editorial Board

Peer review helps the Editor make the decision to publish and, through appropriate interaction with Authors, can also help the Author improve the quality of the work. Peer review is a necessary link in formal scientific communications, located at the very "heart" of the scientific approach. The publisher shares the view that all scholars who wish to contribute to a publication are required to do substantial peer review work.

3.2. diligence

Any selected Reviewer who feels insufficiently qualified to review a manuscript, or who does not have enough time to complete the work quickly, should notify the Editor of Postcolonialism and Modernity and request that they be excluded from the review process of the corresponding manuscript.

3.3. Confidentiality

Any manuscript received for peer review must be treated as a confidential document. This work may not be opened or discussed with anyone not authorized to do so by the Editor.

3.4. Manuscript requirements and objectivity

The reviewer is obliged to give an objective assessment. Personal criticism of the Author is unacceptable. Reviewers should clearly and reasonably express their opinion.

3.5. Recognition of primary sources

Reviewers should identify significant published work that is relevant to the topic and not included in the bibliography of the manuscript. For any statement (observation, conclusion or argument) published earlier, the manuscript must have a corresponding bibliographic reference. The Reviewer should also draw the attention of the Editor to the discovery of significant similarities or coincidences between the manuscript in question and any other published work that is within the scope of the Reviewer's scientific competence.

3.6. Disclosure Policy and Conflicts of Interest

3.6.1 Unpublished data obtained from submitted manuscripts cannot be used in personal research without the written consent of the Author. Information or ideas obtained during the review and related to possible benefits must be kept confidential and not used for personal gain.

3.6.2. Reviewers should not participate in the review of manuscripts in case of conflicts of interest due to competitive, joint and other interactions and relationships with any of the Authors, companies or other organizations associated with the submitted work.

4. Responsibilities of Authors

4.1. Manuscript Requirements

4.1.1 Authors of original research reports should provide credible results of the work done, as well as an objective discussion of the significance of the research. The data underlying the work must be accurately presented. The work must contain sufficient details and bibliographic references for possible reproduction. False or knowingly erroneous statements are perceived as unethical behavior and are unacceptable.

4.1.2. Reviews and scientific articles must also be accurate and objective, the point of view of the Editors must be clearly indicated.

4.2. Data access and storage

Raw data relevant to a manuscript may be requested from Authors for review by Editors. Authors should be prepared to provide public access to this kind of information (according to the ALPSP-STM Statement on Data and Databases), if feasible, and in any case be prepared to retain this data for an adequate period of time after publication.

4.3. Originality and plagiarism

4.3.1 Authors must ensure that the work presented is entirely original and, in the case of using works or statements of other Authors, must provide appropriate bibliographic references or excerpts.

4.3.2 Plagiarism can exist in many forms, from presenting someone else's work as the author's, to copying or paraphrasing significant parts of someone else's work (without attribution) to claiming one's own rights to the results of someone else's research. Plagiarism in all forms is unethical and is unacceptable.

4.4. Plurality, redundancy and simultaneity of publications

4.4.1 In general, an Author should not publish a manuscript mostly devoted to the same research in more than one journal as an original publication. Submitting the same manuscript to more than one journal at the same time is perceived as unethical behavior and is unacceptable.

4.4.2. In general, the Author should not submit a previously published article for consideration to another journal.

4.4.3. Publishing a certain type of article (eg, clinical practice guidelines, translated articles) in more than one journal is ethical in some cases, subject to certain conditions. Authors and Editors of interested journals must agree to a secondary publication presenting necessarily the same data and interpretations as in the primary published work.

A bibliography of the primary work should also be included in the second publication. More information on acceptable forms of secondary (repeated) publications can be found at www.icmje.org.

4.5. Recognition of primary sources

The contribution of others must always be acknowledged. Authors should cite publications that are relevant to the performance of the submitted work. Data obtained privately, for example, in the course of a conversation, correspondence or discussion with third parties, should not be used or presented without the express written permission of the original source. Information obtained from confidential sources, such as evaluation of manuscripts or awards of grants, should not be used without the express written permission of the Authors of the work related to confidential sources.

4.6. Publication authorship

4.6.1 The authors of the publication can only be persons who have made a significant contribution to the formation of the concept of the work, the development, execution or interpretation of the presented research. All those who have made significant contributions should be designated as Contributors. Where research participants have made significant contributions in a particular area of research project, they should be listed as having made significant contributions to the research.

4.6.2. The author must make sure that all participants who have made a significant contribution to the study are presented as Co-Authors and are not listed as Co-Authors those who did not participate in the study, that all Co-Authors have seen and approved the final version of the work and agreed to submit it for publication.

4.8. Disclosure Policy and Conflicts of Interest

4.8.1 All Authors are required to disclose in their manuscripts financial or other existing conflicts of interest that may be perceived as affecting the results or conclusions presented in the work.

4.8.2 Examples of potential conflicts of interest that must be disclosed include employment, consulting, stock ownership, royalties, expert opinions, patent applications or patent registrations, grants, and other financial support. Potential conflicts of interest should be disclosed as early as possible.

4.9. Significant errors in published works

If the Author finds significant errors or inaccuracies in the publication, the Author must inform the Editor of the journal "Postcolonialism and Modernity" and interact with the Editor in order to withdraw the publication or correct errors as soon as possible. If the Editor or the Publisher receives information from a third party that the publication contains significant errors, the Author is obliged to withdraw the work or correct the errors as soon as possible.

5. Responsibilities of the Publisher

5.1 The Publisher shall follow policies and procedures that promote the ethical responsibilities of the Editors, Reviewers and Authors of Postcolonialism and Modernity in accordance with these requirements. The Publisher must be sure that the potential profit from advertising or reprint production does not influence the Editors' decisions.

5.2. The Publisher should support the Editors of Postcolonialism and Modernity in dealing with ethical concerns about published material, and should assist in dealing with other journals and/or Publishers if this facilitates the performance of the Editors' duties.

5.3. The publisher should promote good research practice and implement industry standards to improve ethical guidelines, withdrawal procedures, and error correction.

5.4 The publisher must provide appropriate specialized legal support (opinion or advice) if necessary.

Publication in the journal is free for authors.

The editors do not charge authors for the preparation, placement and printing of materials.

4 issues per year

Dolgov Boris  — Editor-in-chief
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences (Europe and America Division, Leading Researcher)
doctor of historical sciences

Russian Federation
Vanteevskiy Makar  — Executive Secretary
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences (Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, Junior Research Fellow)

Russian Federation

Boris Dolgov

Doctor of Historical Sciences
Leading Researcher

Subdivision: Department of Europe and America

Scientific interests: socio-economic and political development of Eastern society in the late XX - early XXI century; movements of political Islam in the Arab-Muslim world (leading Arab countries, Iran, Turkey); problems of Islamic identity in the Muslim communities of Western Europe (France, Belgium).

Biography. Graduated from the Institute of Asian and African countries, Moscow State University. M. V. Lomonosov. He defended his Ph.D. thesis “The Islamic Movement and the Socio-Political Development of Algerian Society in the 70s-90s. XX century. In 2017 he defended his doctoral dissertation "Genesis of the Islamist movement in the socio-historical dynamics of Algeria, Tunisia and the Arab-Muslim diaspora of France in 1970-2015". Speaks Arabic, English and French. In the course of practical activities and scientific trips, he visited both the countries of Western Europe (France, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, Austria, Greece) and the Arab-Muslim East (Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Tunisia, Algeria, Yemen, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Lebanon, Palestinian Authority, Syria).

The number of publications is more than 100, including 6 monographs.

List of the most significant publications

Monographs:

  • Islamist challenge and Algerian society, 1970–2004 Moscow, 2004. 274 p.
  • The Islamist Challenge of the Arab Spring: Preliminary Results and Perspectives. Saarbrücken, 2015. 94 p.
  • The phenomenon of the "Arab Spring" 2011-2016: causes, development, prospects. Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Algeria. Moscow: LENAND, 2016. 196 p.
  • Arab-Muslim community in France, 1980–2016. Moscow: LENAND, 2017. 158 p.
  • Islamist movement in Algeria and Tunisia, 1970–2017 Moscow: LENAND, 2018. 300 p.
  • Syrian Confrontation: Internal and External Factors (2011–2021). Moscow: LENAND, 2021. 208 p.

Author's sections in collective monographs and textbooks:

  • Algerian experience of the Arab Spring // System monitoring of global and regional risks: the Arab world after the Arab Spring / Ed. ed. A. V. Korotaev et al. Moscow: LENAND, 2013, pp. 21–40.
  • Islam in Politics: Ideology or Pragmatism: An Analytical Report. Moscow: Valdai International Discussion Club, 2013 (in Russian, English, Ar., co-authored).
  • Arab World // World History: in 6 volumes / Ch. ed. A. O. Chubaryan. Moscow: Nauka. 2014. V. 5. S. 545–559 (co-authored with E. A. Prusskaya).
  • Syrian conflict // Conflicts and wars of the XXI century (Middle East and North Africa) / Ed. ed. V. V. Naumkin et al. Moscow: IV RAN, 2015, pp. 401–422.
  • "Islamic state": causes and prospects // Arab crisis: threats of a big war / Ed. ed. A. M. Vasil'eva. Moscow: LENAND, 2016, pp. 16–30.
  • European Islam // Islam in World Politics at the Beginning of the 21st Century: Textbook / Ed. L. M. Efimova, M. A. Sapronova. Moscow: MGIMO-University, 2016, pp. 183–199.
  • Tunisia // Islam in the state and socio-political systems of the countries of the East: a textbook / Ed. L. M. Efimova, M. A. Sapronova. Moscow:: MGIMO-University, 2018. 350 p.
  • Nahda Party in Tunisia // Islamic parties and movements in the political process of the countries of the East: a study guide / D. G. Bdoyan, B. V. Dolgov, Yu. N. Zinin and others; ed. L. M. Efimova, M. A. Sapronova. Moscow: MGIMO-University, 2020. 247 p.

Articles and reviews:

  • Muslim Community in France: Islamic Identity and Secular Society // Asia and Africa Today. 2014. No. 12. P. 27–31; 2015. No. 1. P. 16–19.
  • Islam in France: Muslims and a secular republic // Vostok. Afro-Asian societies: history and modernity. 2015. No. 4. S. 23–133.
  • Middle East politics in faces // International life. 2015. No. 9. P. 169–175. Rec. on the book: Political portraits of leaders of the countries of the Near and Middle East / Ed. V. V. Naumkina, V. V. Popova. Moscow: MGIMO-University, 2015.
  • Two Faces of Moderate Islamism // Asia and Africa Today. 2014. No. 7. P. 73–74. Rec. on the book: Vidyasova M.F., Gasanbekova T.I. Two-faced Janus of moderate Islamism: post-revolutionary struggle in Tunisia and Egypt. Moscow 2013.
  • Muslim renaissance in France: results and prospects // Actual problems of Europe. 2015. No. 4. P. 112–140.
  • The West, the Muslim world and radical Islamism // Actual problems of Europe. 2016. No. 3. P. 49–71.
  • Migration crisis in Europe // Actual problems of Europe. 2016. No. 4. P. 83–104.
  • The Syrian Crisis and Radical Islamism // Asia and Africa Today. 2016. No. 3. P. 7–12; No. 4. P. 2–8.
  • "Soft" and "hard" power of Europe in the Near and Middle East // Actual problems of Europe. 2014. No. 3. P. 14–37.
  • Arab Spring: New Trends // Milestones of the Past: Academic Notes of the Faculty of History. Lipetsk: LGPU, 2014, pp. 86–100.
  • Arab awakening: preliminary results // The Arab world in the flow of events and time. Moscow: Institute of Oriental Studies RAS, 2014, pp. 83–105.
  • Islam in France: Muslims and a secular republic // Vostok. Afro-Asian societies: history and modernity. 2015. No. 4. P. 123–133.
  • Islamic State: Genesis and Practice // Power and Violence in Non-Western Societies: Collection of Articles. Moscow: GBPOU Publishing House Moscow State Educational Complex, 2016, pp. 608–621.
  • The Syrian Crisis and the Phenomenon of the “Islamic State” // The Arab World in the Stream of Events and Time. Moscow: Institute of Oriental Studies RAS, 2016, pp. 103–124.
  • Syrian Crisis: Causes and Development // Poisk. Alternatives. Choice. New politics of the 21st century. Moscow, 2016, pp. 218–233.
  • Algierskie echa Tunisami [Algerian echo of the Tunisian protest] // Fale Tunisami. Kontestacja Arabska w latach 2010–2013. Warszawa, 2014, pp. 70–84 (in Polish).
  • Syrian conflict in 2017 // West-East-Russia 2017: Yearbook / Ed. ed. D. B. Malysheva, V. G. Khoros. Moscow: IMEMO RAN, 2018, pp. 102–105.
  • Bashar al-Assad // Political portraits of figures from the countries of the Near and Middle East. Moscow: MGIMO-University, 2018. Book. 2. P. 60–77.
  • Islamist movements in the Syrian and Iraqi conflicts: a geopolitical aspect // Islamist movements on the political map of the modern world. Moscow: Institute for African Studies RAS, 2018. Issue. 3: Afroasian zone of instability. pp. 121-129.
  • Islamist factor in the context of global trends in social development // Islamist movements on the political map of the modern world. Moscow: Institute for African Studies RAS, 2018. Issue. 3: Afroasian zone of instability. pp. 73–80.
  • Russia in the Middle East and the Palestinian Question // International Affairs. 2019. No. 5. P. 88–102.
  • Confrontation in Syria: a downward trend // West-East-Russia 2018. Yearbook / Ed. ed. A. S. Prozorovsky, V. G. Khoros. Moscow: IMEMO RAN, 2019, pp. 96–100.
  • Islamist Movement and the Arab Crisis in the Context of Modern Trends in Social Development // Vostok / Institute of Oriental Studies RAS, Institute for African Studies RAS. Moscow, 2019, pp. 115–126.
  • Problems of the North African region // World economy and international relations. 2019. V. 63, No. 4. P. 87–96 (co-authored with V. Khoros and Z. Solovieva).
  • New stage of the Syrian crisis in 2017-2019 // Lomonosov Readings. Oriental and African studies: Abstracts of the scientific conference (Moscow, April 15, 2019) / Moscow. state un-t im. M. V. Lomonosov, Institute of Asia and Africa. Moscow: Klyuch-S, 2019, pp. 34–37.
  • The Syrian Crisis at a New Stage // Actual Problems of Europe. 2020. No. 2. P. 122–145.
  • Crisis in the Arab world and political Islam // Asia and Africa today. 2020. No. 6. P. 14–20.
  • Stabilization contours in Syria // West - East - Russia 2019 / IMEMO RAN. Moscow, 2020, pp. 111–113.
  • Syrian crisis (2011–2020): beginning // East (Oriens). 2020. No. 6. P. 118–128. DOI:10.31857/S086919080012746-7.
  • Chapter 7. The Syrian conflict in the context of a new stage of globalization // Asia and Africa at the crossroads of traditions, globalization and modernization: a collective monograph / Ed. ed. A. M. Khazanov. Moscow: IV RAN, 2019, pp. 104–114.
  • Russia and Turkey in the regional and geopolitical space // Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law. 2021. V. 14, No. 3. S. 147–160.

Additional information:

  • is a member of the group of experts on international anti-extremist cooperation under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia;
  • member of the Writers' Union of Russia;
  • member of the Imperial Orthodox Palestinian Society.

Mission

The journal will publish materials on the problem of post-colonialism in the countries of the Global South: Asia, Africa and Latin America. This phenomenon generalizes the experience of transitional societies at the stage of their movement from comprehensive (political, economic, ideological and cultural) dependence on the former metropolises and neo-colonial centers of dominance to true sovereignty and equality.

The journal will provide direct open access to its content, based on the principle that free open access to research results contributes to an increase in the global exchange of knowledge. Publication in the journal is free for authors. The editors do not charge authors for the preparation, placement and printing of materials.

The contact persons
Editor-in-chief
Dolgov Boris
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