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Gdzie naprawdę są konfitury? : najważniejsze gospodarcze korzyści członkostwa Polski w Unii Europejskiej
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ISBN: 8323553483 8323553408 Year: 2021 Publisher: Warszawa : Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego,

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Publikacja prezentuje przekrojowe spojrzenie na konsekwencje uczestnictwa Polski w Jednolitym Rynku Europejskim (JRE). Przedstawiono w niej syntetycznie problematykę korzyści z członkostwa Polski w UE oraz szacunki efektów gospodarczych udziału w JRE i napływu transferów (funduszy strukturalnych i funduszy związanych ze wspólną polityką rolną), a także bilans korzyści i kosztów wynikający dla Polski z czterech swobód JRE: przepływu towarów, usług, kapitału i pracowników. Tom zawiera również refleksję na temat znaczenia funduszy europejskich dla rozwoju Polski oraz bilansu korzyści i kosztów członkostwa dla polskiego sektora rolno-spożywczego.


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Bundeswehr 3.0 : the political, military and social dimensions of the reform of the German armed forces
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Year: 2012 Publisher: Warszawa, Poland : Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich im. Marka Karpia,

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Rozpoczęta w 2011 roku reforma Bundeswehry to jeden z trzech przełomowych etapów w powojennej transformacji sił zbrojnych RFN. Ma na celu „skonstruowanie” na nowo niemieckiej armii w wymiarze politycznym, wojskowym i społecznym. Niniejszy tekst przedstawia ewolucję roli sił zbrojnych w polityce zagranicznej i bezpieczeństwa RFN i proces „konstruowania” nowej Bundeswehry.W tekście omówiona została redefinicja celów i zasad zagranicznego zaangażowania Bundeswehry, kierunki przekształceń wojskowych, zmian wizerunku i społecznej tożsamości armii oraz konsekwencje tak szeroko pojętej reformy dla współpracy politycznej i wojskowej w ramach NATO i UE.

A weak link? Germany in the Euro-Atlantic security system
Authors: ---
Year: 2015 Publisher: Warszawa [Poland] : OSW Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich im. Marka Karpia

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The political, military and economic parameters of German power influence the vision of the international order that Berlin favours. Politically, Germany is a regional power in the EU with considerable diplomatic potential. Economically, it is the world's third largest power with growing global trade and investment links. At the same time, Germany's military potential is limited and the German strategic culture makes the country sceptical about the use of military instruments. Berlin is thus essentially interested in maintaining peace and stability, both in Europe and globally, and in developing diplomatic mechanisms to manage regional and global crises and conflicts. // The German preference for dialogue and compromise in conflict situations in the regional and global dimensions may increasingly pose a risk to maintaining the cohesion and credibility of NATO – both from the perspective of the USA and Germany’s allies from Central-Eastern and Northern Europe.

The devil is in the details. Information warfare in the light of Russia's military doctrine
Authors: ---
Year: 2015 Publisher: Warszawa [Poland] : OSW Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich im. Marka Karpia

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By highlighting informational threats and giving them a military dimension, the authors of the Russian Federation's military doctrine have outlined the concept of information warfare. It is a kind of combat conducted by both conventional and indirect methods, open and concealed, using military and civilian structures. It has two dimensions: broader ("non-nuclear containment", i.e. combat waged on various levels - political, economic, diplomatic, humanitarian, military) and narrower (as an element supporting of action). // An analysis of these issues enables us to identify several rising trends over the period 2000-2014 in Russian security policy. These boil down to a blurring of the boundaries between internal and external threats, introducing non-military methods and organisational structures to armed combat, and conferring an ideological character on this combat. This leads to a blurring of the contours of inter-state conflicts, which allows Russia to take part in armed conflicts in which it is not officially a party.

Rosyjskie siły zbrojne na froncie walki informacyjnej. Dokumenty strategiczne
Authors: ---
Year: 2016 Publisher: Warszawa [Poland] : OSW Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich im. Marka Karpia

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Pytanie o rolę sił zbrojnych w przestrzeni informacyjnej jest w istocie pytaniem o rolę czynnika siły w polityce wewnętrznej i zewnętrznej państwa. W Rosji był on i nadal jest traktowany jako wyznacznik jej pozycji mocarstwowej, instrument odstraszania, nacisków i budowy sfer wpływów. Dostosowana do takich zadań wojskowa strategia informacyjna przewiduje walkę na wielu frontach: wewnętrznym i zewnętrznym, informacyjno-psychologicznym, cybernetycznym i in. Jej widoczne konsekwencje przejawiły się nie tylko w militaryzacji języka polityki i propagandy, narzucaniu opinii publicznej narracji o wydanej Rosji wojnie informacyjnej oraz diametralnej zmianie wizerunku armii. Rosja siłą domaga się respektowania swoich stref wpływów w sąsiedztwie (agresja wobec Ukrainy, interwencja zbrojna w Syrii). Burzy europejską i globalną architekturę bezpieczeństwa, przedstawiając się zarazem jako gwarant procesów pokojowych. Prezentując się jako biegun siły, manifestuje prawo do współdecydowania w kwestiach bezpieczeństwa globalnego.


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The peninsula as an island : Crimea in its third year since annexation
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Year: 2016 Publisher: Warszawa : Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich im. Marka Karpia,

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More than two and a half years after its annexation, Crimea is more reminiscent of an island than a peninsula, and its population's impeded access to the mainland is adversely affecting its conditions and quality of life. Regardless of the transport and social problems, the vast majority of the population have remained on the peninsula adapting to the new situation. They are willing to blame the present difficulties on sanctions, the West's policies and the Ukrainian diversion. This attitude has been reinforced by Moscow's policy of 'facts on the ground', its harsh rhetoric, its refusal to consider revising the status quo, and Kyiv's lack of determination to restore its jurisdiction over Crimea. If this situation does not change, within a generation the peninsula may be fully integrated with Russia, due to the bridges being constructed over the Kerch Strait, as well as the expansion of Russian media and cultural ties. Crimean Tatars as a community have suffered most as a result of the annexation. Their representative body, the Mejlis, has been recognised as an extremist organisation in Russia, which prevents it from operating on the peninsula.

HELSINŠKE SVESKE №17, How to attain european standards - the Situation of Serbian Prisons 2002-2003.
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
Year: 2003 Publisher: Belgrade [Serbia] : Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava u Srbiji

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(English edition) Throughout the totalitarian rule of the regime of Slobodan Milošević and his henchmen, which lasted for over a decade, the country’s prisons remained shut to public scrutiny. Information about the state of human rights of the prisoners and the conditions in which they served their sentences was the exclusive privilege of the state authorities directly involved and of the individuals and institutions concerned with the matter for purposes of scientific research. The question of prisoners’ human rights was completely marginalized by war, crimes, economic hardship and daily violations of citizens’ human rights and freedoms up to 5 October 2000. For many a convict, being locked away to serve a sentence of imprisonment did not mean mere deprivation of liberty for a set period of time, but also the start of a cruel struggle for survival in the gloom of lawlessness, corruption, torture, inhuman conditions and society’s total lack of interest in his or her life behind bars. It was only after widespread prison rioting broke out in November 2000 that the public’s attention was drawn to the conditions in which the prisoners served their sentences. The prisoners put out announcements throwing light on the substandard and inhuman conditions prevailing in Serbia’s penitentiaries and prisons. During the riots, groups and individual prisoners made statements complaining that the prison conditions were far below the levels set by relevant international standards and domestic prison rules. The prisoners alleged serious violations of their physical and psychological integrity, humiliating and degrading treatment, unjust punishment and general arbitrary treatment by prison personnel. They complained of, among other things, torture by beating, lack of minimum personal hygiene facilities, absence of medical treatment and health care, and corruption among prison administrative staff. Some of the allegations and complaints were partly confirmed by competent officials of the Ministry of Justice. As a palliative for the utterly unsatisfactory prison conditions, federal and republican amnesty laws were duly introduced to be finally adopted respectively on 26 February 2001 and 13 February 2001. Nonetheless, although a number of convicts were fully amnestied and a percentage of sentences commuted, the conditions in which prisoners served their sentenced remained unchanged. In addition to the factors mentioned above, the inhuman conditions in Serbia’s prisons endured and multiplied also owing to the country’s isolation of many years, during which time no international organization other than the International Red Cross was granted access to its prisons. Domestic non-governmental organizations were also kept at arm’s length and only rarely allowed to see what went on inside. In view of the circumstances enumerated above, it was clearly necessary to introduce continuous monitoring of prisons by an independent, non-governmental institution in order to obtain a realistic picture of the prison conditions. The new government is aware that admission to the Council of Europe and to other international organizations depends in part on the conditions in which sentenced persons serve their prison sentences, as well as that the public must be informed about those conditions. So, after presenting the concept and objectives of the Prison Monitoring project, the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia was granted permission in May 2001 to visit institutions for the enforcement of criminal sanctions. This meant that for the first time in the history of this state an NGO could apply for and be granted permission to visit places of detention, custody and imprisonment without any restrictions, to interview prisoners with no personnel being present, and to talk to personnel without the presence of administration officers. Between June 2001 and October 2003, the Helsinki Committee paid a total of twenty-one visits to institutions for the enforcement of sanctions entailing the deprivation of liberty. During the period covered by this report (April 2002 to October 2003) the Helsinki Committee visited twelve institutions (one maximum-security prison, two closed prisons, three open prisons, two district prisons, one psychiatric prison, one reformatory, and one juvenile prison). In launching the project, the Helsinki Committee was principally guided by Article 64 of the European Prison Rules which states: ‘Imprisonment is by the deprivation of liberty a punishment in itself. The conditions of imprisonment and the prison regimes shall not, therefore, except as incidental to justifiable segregation or the maintenance of discipline, aggravate the suffering inherent in this.’ The Helsinki Committee hopes that its efforts to complete the project and publish this book will make a small but valuable contribution towards achieving this goal.

Readings in European Security. Volume 4
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2007 Publisher: Brussels [Belgium] : CEPS Centre for European Policy Studies

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This fourth volume of Readings in European Security contains the papers commissioned for presentation and discussion at the meetings of the European Security Forum (ESF) in the period from January 2006 to February 2007. They have been previously published in the European Security Forum Working Paper series, Nos. 21-25. The Edidors gratefully acknowledge financial support received for the European Security Forum from the Compagnia di San Paolo, DCAF, NATO, the Open Society Institute and the US Mission to the EU.


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Kaliningrad Oblast 2016 : the society, economy and army
Authors: --- --- --- ---
Year: 2016 Publisher: Warszawa, Poland : Ośrodek Studiów Wschodnich im. Marka Karpia,

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Moscow has been developing a new model of governance for Kaliningrad Oblast in 2016. The changes in the regional government (the governance of the oblast was entrusted to people sent from Moscow and had no links with the region) were part of it. These are a result of Russia's depleting financial resources and austerity policy, the increasing militarisation of the Russian Federation and the important role the oblast plays in this policy, and the need to ensure a satisfactory result in the upcoming presidential election. Although there are at present no visible symptoms suggesting an intensification of protest sentiments, Moscow is taking preventive action to try to tighten its grip on local elites and residents. Kaliningrad Oblast remains an essential element of the Russian military strategy in the Baltic region. This is borne out by the deployment in the region of S-400 air defence systems, ships equipped with Kalibr missiles, and Bastion missile defence systems (which are nominally anti-ship weapons but are also adjusted to attacking ground targets). Furthermore, the deployment of Iskander missile systems has been launched which enables the creation of a so-called 'Anti-Access/Area Denial' (A2/AD) zone, extending the range of Russian weapons to the territories and airspace of the neighbouring NATO member states.


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Nowe uzbrojenie Rosji : propaganda, uzupełnianie braków czy wyzwanie dla NATO?
Authors: ---
ISBN: 8364895559 Year: 2015 Publisher: [Place of publication not identified] : Polski Instytut Spraw Międzynarodowych,

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In recent years, Russia has intensified work on new types of weapons for all parts of its Armed Forces. By introducing the new weapon types, Russia wants to base its strength not only on its nuclear forces, which in many cases is completely ineffective as a deterrent, but also on conventional forces. This goal has resulted in the need to replace obsolete equipment and has been financed by the economic prosperity of the country, thanks mainly to high oil prices. With the higher inflows to the country's budget, Russian authorities managed to increase funds for rearmament. The current economic crisis, however, and in particular the fall in the price of crude oil, the sales of which form the base revenue of Russia's budget (amounting to about 45%), may result in a loss of funding for the rearmament programmes. The plans may be further limited by technological deficiencies in Russia's military industry, exacerbated by sanctions introduced by the EU and U.S. in response to Russia's actions in Ukraine and which prevent the acquisition of Western technology, especially military-grade electronics. In the short- and medium-term perspectives, Russia's financial problems may result in the need to select priority technologies and choose between the armed forces that will be equipped first. Considering the amount of new equipment introduced by Russia and ongoing research projects on new types of weapons, the most important is the Russian Air and Space Forces, as well as its Strategic Rocket Forces. The country will also invest in weapons for ground troops and naval aviation. A number of changes will also affect the navy, but in this case the reason is mainly the poor technical condition of Russian Federation assets.

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