
Hanna Perekhoda
Articles
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2 months ago |
links.org.au | Hanna Perekhoda |Francesca Barca
First published at Voxeurop. Hanna Perekhoda is a historian and researcher at the University of Lausanne – Institute of Political Studies and Centre for International History and Political Studies of Globalisation, specialising in nationalism in the context of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union. Her doctoral research examines the political strategies of the Bolsheviks in Ukraine between 1917 and the 1920s.
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Oct 31, 2024 |
links.org.au | Hanna Perekhoda
[Editor's note: The following is an edited transcript of the speech and responses to questions given by Hanna Perekhoda on the “Imperialism(s) today” panel at the “Boris Kagarlitsky and the challenges of the left today” online conference, which was organised by the Boris Kagarlitsky International Solidarity Campaign on October 8. Perekhoda is a Ukrainian socialist, member of solidaritéS in Vaud Canton, Switzerland, and a PhD candidate in Political Science (University of Lausanne).
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Jul 30, 2024 |
vientosur.info | Hanna Perekhoda
El 21 de febrero de 2022, Vladimir Putin pronunciaba un largo discurso cuyo objetivo era justificar la invasión de Ucrania anunciada tres días más tarde. No fue una sorpresa que entre los pretextos para intentar justificar la ocupación militar del vecino país, por otra parte, colonia secular del imperio ruso e independiente solo desde hace 30 años, Putin invocara la expansión al Este de la OTAN.
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Jul 2, 2024 |
links.org.au | Ilya Budraitskis |Hanna Perekhoda |Simon Pirani
What are the global ramifications of Putin’s bloody effort to erase Ukraine’s right to self-determination, and what political and ideological challenges does it pose to those who seeking to solidarize with victims of imperialism and neocolonialism? These and related questions are addressed by socialist activists from Ukraine, Russia, and the United Kingdom in this event sponsored by Haymarket Books and Ukraine Solidarity Network.
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Feb 24, 2024 |
posle.media | Hanna Perekhoda |Nikolay Sukhanov
As evidenced by numerous public statements from Russian state officials, Ukraine plays a disproportionately important role in their self-representation and worldview. Remarkably, the portrayal of Ukraine as a linchpin for both Russian internal stability and external power had already permeated the Russian political imagination long before Putin’s rise to power.
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