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Russification - Soviet Union |  | Russification - Soviet Union: Encyclopedia II - Russification - Soviet Union |  | Karelia, Chechnya and Tatarstan republics of Russia also tried to switch their alphabets to Latin, but the Latin alphabet was officially banned for Russia's official languages. This position was officially explained by two reasons: a) switching needs finances, but they are limited; b) it is difficult to make adult people accept the changes. Sometimes this move has been viewed as remnants of policy of Russification.
In the Soviet Union, publications in technical and scientific journals were mostly in Russian; this led to underdevelopme ...
See also:Russification, Russification - History, Russification - Moldova, Russification - Soviet Union, Russification - Present times, Russification - Reference |  | | Russification, Russification - History, Russification - Moldova, Russification - Present times, Russification - Reference, Russification - Soviet Union, Anti-Polonism, Anti-Romanian discrimination, Autocracy, Orthodoxy, and National Character, Germanisation, Korenizatsiya, Polonization, Population transfer in the Soviet Union, Russophobia, Soviet people, Ukrainization |  | |
|  |  | Russification: Encyclopedia II - Russification - Soviet Union
Russification - Soviet Union
Karelia, Chechnya and Tatarstan republics of Russia also tried to switch their alphabets to Latin, but the Latin alphabet was officially banned for Russia's official languages. This position was officially explained by two reasons: a) switching needs finances, but they are limited; b) it is difficult to make adult people accept the changes. Sometimes this move has been viewed as remnants of policy of Russification.
In the Soviet Union, publications in technical and scientific journals were mostly in Russian; this led to underdevelopment of modern technical and scientific terminology in national languages, further degrading their status. While formally all languages were equal, in almost all Soviet republics the Russian/local bilingualism was "asymmetric," as in India: the titular nation learned Russian, whereas immigrant Russians generally did not learn the local language.
Other related archives1831, 1863, 1864, 1876, 1880s, 1904, 1917 revolution, 1919, Abkhazia, Anti-Polonism, Anti-Romanian discrimination, Arabic alphabet, Autocracy, Orthodoxy, and National Character, Baltic, Belarus, Belarusian, Bessarabia, Catholic, Central Asian, Chechnya, Congress Kingdom, Cyrillic alphabet, DeKalb, Ems Ukaz, Georgia, Germanisation, Gothic, Imperial Russia, India, Jan Tomasz Gross, January Uprising, Karelia, Kazakhstan, Knygnešiai, Korenizatsiya, Kyiv Shevchenko University Press, Kyrghyzstan, Latin, Latin alphabet, Lithuania, Lithuanian, Lukashenka, Mari El, Mikhail Muravyov, Moldavian SSR, Moldova, Moldovan language, NGOs, Northern Illinois University, PWN, Partitions of Poland, Poland-Lithuania, Polish language, Polonization, Population transfer in the Soviet Union, Princeton University Press, Putin, Robert Conquest, Romania, Romanian language, Russia, Russian Orthodox, Russian alphabet, Russian language, Russification (computers), Russification of Finland, Russo-Japanese War, Russophobia, Second World War, Slavic, Society of Poles in Belarus, South Ossetia, Soviet Union, Soviet people, Stalin, Tatarstan, Transnistria, Turkish alphabet, Ukrainian language, Ukrainization, Vilnius University, Yanukovich, Yushchenko, bilingualism, computers, culture, demographics, immigrant, localization, national, national minorities, politics, republics inside the Russian Federation, software, titular nation, unrecognized de facto independent
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Soviet Union", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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