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| Founder | Federal Agency of Scientific Institutions |
|---|---|
| Established | 1947 |
| Focus | Slavic studies |
| President | Konstantin Nikiforov [ru] |
| Formerly called | Institute for Slavic and Balcan Studies of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR |
| Address | 119991 Moscow,Leninsky Prospekt 32A |
| Location | Moscow ,Russia |
| Website | http://www.inslav.ru/ |
TheInstitute for Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences (Russian: Институт славяноведения РАН) is an integral part of the Historical and Philological Studies Department of theRussian Academy of Sciences.[1] It is focused on comprehensivestudies of Slavic history, culture, literature, and languages.
The Institute was founded in 1947 as the Institute for Slavic and Balcan Studies of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. Since 1997, the Institute has its current name. Amongst the researchers of the Institute were Academicians of theRAS:Yulian Bromley,Nikolay Derzhavin,Boris Grekov,Gennady Litavrin,Dmitry Markov,Leonid Milov,Sergey Obnorsky,Vladimir Picheta,Yury Pisarev,Mikhail Tikhomirov,Nikita Tolstoy,Vladimir Toporov, andOleg Trubachyov;Corresponding Members of theRAS:Tatiana Nikolaeva,Petr Tretyakov,Zinaida Udaltsova, andVladimir Volkov. Currently, there are Academicians of theRAS:Vladimir Dybo,Vyacheslav Ivanov, andAndrey A. Zaliznyak; Foreign Member of theSerbian Academy of Sciences and ArtsAnatolij A. Turilov; andCorresponding Members of theRAS:Aleksey Gippius andBoris Floria.
The Institute for Slavic Studies publishes academic journals and periodicals:
Slavianovedenie
Slavianovedenie (Russian:Славяноведение, ISSN 0132-1366) is anacademic journal published six times a year since 1965 (before 1992,Sovetskoe Slavianovedenie). Issues of the journal since 1965 till 2009 are available free on the website of the Institute.[2]
Slověne
Slověne = Словѣне. International Journal of Slavic Studies (pISSN 2304-0785, eISSN 2305-6754) is a biannualpeer-reviewedopen-accessacademic journal since 2012.[3]
Slavic Almanac (Russian:Славянский альманах, ISSN 2073-5731) is published since 1997.[4]
Slavic World in the Third Millennium (Russian:Славянский мир в третьем тысячелетии) is a yearbook published since 2006.[5]
Archaeographic Yearbook (Russian:Археографический ежегодник) has been published since 1957 by theArchaeographic Commission.
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