10 research outputs found

    End of organised atheism. The genealogy of the law on freedom of conscience and its conceptual effects in Russia

    Get PDF
    In the current climate of the perceived alliance between the Russian Orthodox Church and the state, atheist activists in Moscow share a sense of juridical marginality that they seek to mitigate through claims to equal rights between believers and atheists under the Russian law on freedom of conscience. In their demands for their constitutional rights, including the right to political critique, atheist activists come across as figures of dissent at risk of the state's persecution. Their experiences constitute a remarkable (and unexamined in anthropology) reversal of political and ideological primacy of state-sponsored atheism during the Soviet days. To illuminate the legal context of the atheists’ current predicament, the article traces an alternative genealogy of the Russian law on freedom of conscience from the inception of the Soviet state through the law's post-Soviet reforms. The article shows that the legal reforms have paved the way for practical changes to the privileged legal status of organized atheism and brought about implicit conceptual effects that sideline the Soviet meaning of freedom of conscience as freedom from religion and obscure historical references to conscience as an atheist tenet of Soviet ethics

    The role of quality management system in the development of Kuban SAU human capital

    No full text
    The article shows the experience of Kuban State Agrarian University in development andimplementation of the quality management system. An approved approach to evaluation of the effectiveness of QMS improvement describing the dynamics of university development is presented

    Processing of Fruits and Fruit Juices by Novel Electrotechnologies

    No full text
    corecore