John Barrett Dunlop (1942-2023) was an American political scientist, an emeritus senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, an expert on Soviet and Russian politics from 1980s to 2023.[1]
Bachelor's degree, magna cum laude, from Harvard University and master's and doctoral degrees from Yale University. National Fellow at the Hoover Institution in 1978–79.[1]
Books
edit- 2018: (With Vladimir Kara-Murza) The February 2015 Assassination of Boris Nemtsov and the Flawed Trial of His Alleged Killers
- 2017: Exodus: St. John Maximovitch Leads His Flock Out of Shanghai
- 2012: The Moscow Bombings of September 1999: Examinations of Russian Terrorist Attacks at the Onset of Vladimir Putin's Rule
- 2006: The 2002 Dubrovka and 2004 Beslan Hostage Crises: a Critique of Russian Counter-Terrorism
- 1998: Russia Confronts Chechnya: Roots of a Separatist Conflict
- 1993: The Rise of Russia and the Fall of the Soviet Union
- 1985: The New Russian Nationalism
- 1983: The Faces of Contemporary Russian Nationalism
- 1976: New Russian Revolutionaries
- 1972: Staretz Amvrosy, Model for Dostoevsky's Staretz Zossima
References
edit- ^ a b Dunlop's profile at the Hoover Institution.
External links
edit- Inventory of the John B. Dunlop collection at the Online Archive of California
- Printed matter related to the disintegration of the Soviet Union, and to political conditions in post-Soviet Russia. Includes a 1968 official Soviet report (incomplete), summarizing results of the investigation of the All-Russian Social-Christian Union for the Liberation of the People.