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Society

Presidential Elections in Russia: Past, Present, Putin

17 March Putin is scheduled to be elected president of the Russian Federation for yet another six years in office, in spite of launching a devastating war against Ukraine and letting oppositional politician Alexei Navalny die in prison. Putin will be the eighth president of Russia since the fall of communism, but he was also the seventh, the sixth, the fourth and the third. Since the start of this millennium he has ruled the country in an increasingly authoritarian way. Elections in Russia have since become a farce, a kind of political theatre or circus that has little to do with democracy. The field of candidates is tightly controlled, opposition politicians sidelined, jailed or murdered and the election results are falsified. How did this come about? When was democracy lost in Russia – or was it perhaps an empty letter from the very start? What purposes do elections serve in Russia's political system if not the election of the country's leaders? On March 13 the IISH and the Moscow Times jointly organize an event to reflect on Russia's presidential elections, past, present and future. With presentations by Gijs Kessler and Mikhail Fishman, followed by a panel discussion with Samantha Berkhead, Alexander Gubsky, and Kristina Petrasova.
IISG
Law

Special lecture on the MH17 judgment

Mr. Orie is a former justice on the Dutch Supreme Court (Hoge Raad) and the International Criminal Tribunal forthe Former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
Lipsius Building, Room 28
Law

DRLA Annual Meeting and Symposium

The Dutch-Russian Law Association cordially invites you to an online symposium on the effects of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine on the legal and political system of the Russian Federation. 
Online via Zoom