CREEES Documentary Film Lending Library is designed to provide video resources on Russia, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia for teachers, researchers, and lecturers.
Libraries and Archives at Stanford house East European/Russian/Soviet collections totaling over half a million volumes. The major research resources in this area are in the Cecil H. Green Library's Slavic Collection and the Library and Archives of the Hoover Institution. These libraries have, in addition to monographs, American, foreign, and emigre scholarly journals and periodicals, and unique unpublished materials. Exchanges with major academic libraries in Russia and Eastern Europe assure the continued excellence of Stanford's collections. The Academic Computing Center at the Meyer Library houses the Language Laboratory and a substantial collection of documentary and feature films on videotape and has access to selected Russian television programming.
The Hoover Institution, in addition to holding one of the country's richest library and archival collections on Russia and Eastern Europe, has fellowship programs for scholars working on these areas, and sponsors lectures, conferences, and other relevant activities.
The Center on Democracy, Development, and the Rule of Law (CDDRL) of Stanford University's Institute for International Studies seeks to promote innovative and practical research to assist developing countries and transitioning societies in the design and implementation of policies to foster democracy, to promote balanced and sustainable growth, and to advance the rule of law.
The Center for International Security and Cooperation brings together Stanford University faculty members from several scholarly disciplines with senior specialists from around the world and pre- and post- doctoral fellows for research projects, seminars and conferences, and international scholarly exchange. Ongoing research projects include: Strategic Stability, Defense Conversion, Nuclear Weapons Proliferation, and Ethno-nationalism and Regional Conflict.
Department of Slavic
Languages and Literatures at Stanford University offers undergraduate
and graduate degrees in Slavic Studies. The department also sponsors
lectures and conferences, including a yearly conference in conjuction with the University of California,
Berkeley.
Stanford Overseas Studies offers a variety of overseas study opportunities to undergraduate Stanford students and continuing CREEES A.M. students. The Moscow program began in the Autumn Quarter 1993-94 with classes offered in politics, history, economics, sociology, and language. A Stanford overseas campus is also located in Berlin, where Stanford students can enroll in courses on Eastern Europe.
Slavianskii Dom is an undergraduate residence and theme house for students interested in Russian and East European Studies. It provides a focal point for many formal and informal activities (language tables, films, house seminars), and is the heart of social activities.
Zhe: Stanford's Student Journal of Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies is a peer-reviewed interdisciplinary annual journal showcasing student scholarship relevant to the study of Russia, Eastern Europe, and Eurasia. This journal was created to promote university-wide recognition of Stanford students' commitment to scholarship in the area and to foster an interest among the greater student body for further academic engagement in the region.
Stanford Homepage provides links to other departments and research centers, a news service, and a search engine.
Stanford Overseas Studies offers a variety of overseas study opportunities to undergraduate Stanford students and continuing CREEES A.M. students. The Moscow program began in the Autumn Quarter 1993-94 with classes offered in politics, history, economics, sociology, and language. A Stanford overseas campus is also located in Berlin, where Stanford students can enroll in courses on Eastern Europe.
Bing
Moscow
Program Summary
The Stanford Center in Moscow is hosted by the prestigious Academy of the National Economy, located in the southwest part of the city. The bustling metropolis of Moscow has served as an icon of Russian spiritual and political power for more than 850 years. The city, once a village based around a small wooden fort called the Kremlin, is today home to more than ten million people. Russia's largest city, as well as its capital, Moscow has long been at the forefront of the country's political and economic affairs. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, Moscow has remained not only the leader of political change in Russia, but also a vibrant center of culture for the nation.
http://osp.stanford.edu/moscow/osp_mos.html