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Showing all 10 results
Rimashevskaia, N. M.; Shabunova, A. A. – Russian Education and Society, 2013
According to research data, in today's Russia 70 percent of children are born with various health risk factors, and this leads to a rapid deterioration of their health during their school years. The health of school students is getting worse as a consequence of the effect of a whole set of social and economic and psychological factors, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Risk, Economic Factors, Social Influences
Rimashevskaia, N. M.; Breeva, E. B. – Russian Education and Society, 2013
Russia's future is put in jeopardy by a decline in both the size of the
population and its health and human capital. There is an urgent need
for policies to deal with this problem.
Descriptors: Human Capital, Foreign Countries, Population Growth, Population Trends
Rimashevskaia, N. M. – Russian Education and Society, 2012
The future of Russian society is manifested in the new generation, the community of children and young people. To a large extent, the country's social and economic development depends on the health and education of the rising generation, on its social values and orientations, its spirituality and morality, and its level of cultural accumulation.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society), Children, Youth
Rimashevskaia, N. M. – Russian Education and Society, 2011
There can be no doubt that gender attitudes and the gender stereotypes formed on their basis have a deep-rooted social character. This stems unequivocally from the parallels of development of social processes and gender models. The ideology of gender began to flourish in Russia along with perestroika, an ideology that in the past quarter-century…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Sex Stereotypes, Sex Role, Ideology
Rimashevskaia, N. M.; Zubova, L. T.; Antropova, O. A. – Russian Education and Society, 2011
Russian science is experiencing processes of personnel aging and stagnation, which are disrupting the continuity of the generations and are limiting prospective workers' opportunities for professional and career growth. The decline in the prestige of science work, the exodus of specialists into other, more attractive segments of economic activity…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Research, Science Careers, Scientists
Rimashevskaia, N. M.; Dobrokhleb, V. G.; Kislitsyna, O. A. – Russian Education and Society, 2010
The demographic situation in the Russian Federation is characterized by a steady process of natural population loss; it began in 1992 and coincided with the economic crisis. To a partial extent the loss was made up for by migration, and by early 2008 the number of inhabitants of Russia declined to 142 million compared to 148.6 million in early…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Human Capital, Educational Needs, Birth Rate
Rimashevskaia, N. M.; Breeva, E. B.; Shabunova, A. A.; Barsukova, R. T. – Russian Education and Society, 2008
Today's children represent tomorrow's backbone of the Russian population, the foundation of Russia's success or failure in the twenty-first century. Nevertheless, owing to a number of factors, the state, society, and even, all too often, parents themselves, do not pay enough attention to children. A number of problems have arisen that are leading…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Problems, Qualitative Research, Children
Rimashevskaia, N. M. – Russian Education and Society, 2007
The importance of a country's population as the carrier of its intellectual potential increases greatly in a postindustrial country, where the nation's intelligence, comprised of an aggregate of the intelligence of individuals, becomes the true engine and decisive factor of progress. Any loss of human resources in Russia, without regard to age and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Security, Intelligence, Human Resources
Rimashevskaia, N. M. – Russian Education and Society, 2004
From 1992 through 2001, Russia lost more than 7 million people as a result of natural population loss or, with the positive migration balance taken into account, 4.7 million. These statistics show that the size of Russia's population is diminishing steadily. This article reports the findings of a study examining the factors that account for the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Child Welfare, Population Trends, Infant Mortality
Rimashevskaia, N. M. – Russian Education and Society, 2004
Russian researchers have identified three forms of monogamous family in Russia: (1) The patriarchal or traditional family; (2) The child-centered or modern family; and (3) The spousal or postmodern family. This article presents the findings of a study examining the structural characteristics of the Russian sample of families. This Russian-American…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Structure, Marriage, Drug Abuse

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