Many contemporary revolutions that bring many people to the streets do not lead to any systemic change. The problem starts even with articulating those programms for systemic change and creating the institutions, the political organizations that would lead tot those systemif change. So that's why we wee actually seen like a huge number of the revolutions. But we see a lot of revolutions without major institutional revolutionary change. Tha, dad, follow them.
An in-depth interview on the historical and political-economic context of the Ukraine crisis with Ukrainian sociologist Volodymyr Ishchenko.
Read Volodymyr's work:
truthout.org/articles/ukrainians-are-far-from-unified-on-nato-let-them-decide-for-themselves/
ponarseurasia.org/how-maidan-revolutions-reproduce-and-intensify-the-post-soviet-crisis-of-political-representation/
lefteast.org/ukraine-in-the-vicious-circle-of-the-post-soviet-crisis-of-hegemony/
lefteast.org/contradictions-post-soviet-ukraine-failure-ukraine-new-left/
Tony Wood on Russia: thedigradio.com/podcast/russia-beyond-putin-with-tony-wood/
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