1,500 research outputs found
Latest dispatch from the international propaganda war in Ukraine
Ukrainian LSE student Elena Serdyuk gives a personal view of the media battle in the crisis with Russia and the Crimea. You can read her previous article on the crisis here During a debate “Russia, Ukraine and Us,” organized by the LSE and BBC Radio 4 there was a consensus on at least one aspect of the crisis: that Western media were late to the party in terms of covering events in Ukraine, as compared to their Russian counterparts. Indeed, there wasn’t much continuous reporting on Ukraine in the US and the UK (with the possible exception of the BBC) from the beginning of the protests at the end of November up until the invasion of Crimea two weeks ago
Dielectric mixtures -- electrical properties and modeling
In this paper, a review on dielectric mixtures and the importance of the
numerical simulations of dielectric mixtures are presented. It stresses on the
interfacial polarization observed in mixtures. It is shown that this
polarization can yield different dielectric responses depending on the
properties of the constituents and their concentrations. Open question on the
subject are also introduced.Comment: 40 pages 12 figures, to be appear in IEEE Trans. on Dielectric
A Ukrainian take on Russia’s ‘propaganda’ campaign (guest blog)
This article is by LSE Student Elena Serdyuk. It’s a personal account from someone who feels involved in the fate of her nation, but it also highlights how the media campaign is mobilised alongside the military manoeuvres at this stage. Never in my life did I think I would utter the words, “Ukraine is at war!” Last Sunday I did. As a group of my friends and I tried to digest the shocking news, we all agreed that the war had started much earlier—the unfair, all-out, hard-to-win propaganda war on Ukraine, led by the Russian media
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