Showing 1 - 13 results of 13 for search '"diplomatic service"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
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    The Prototypes of MGIMO: from the History of Specialized Diplomatic Education in Russia by A. I. Kuznetsov

    Published 2014-02-01
    “…The article considers the history of establishing and developing specialized education of diplomats in the pre-revolutionary Russia that was perfected along with the professionalization and growth of the diplomatic service, while the country's international contacts expanded and grew more complicated. …”
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    Legal Status of Diplomats: Duties, Restrictions, Prohibitions by T. A. Zanko

    Published 2014-08-01
    “…Elements of the legal status are evaluated through the lens of comparative research and include the experience of diplomatic service legal regulation in the former Soviet Union countries as well as in other foreign countries.…”
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    School of Central and South-Eastern European Languages by Y. S. Zelenov

    Published 2014-10-01
    “…The department's faculty also conducts research, reflected in numerous publications Graduates of the school successfully work in the diplomatic service, as well as in teaching at MGIMO.…”
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    Legal status of diplomatic workers: rights, state guarantees, encouragement by T. A. Zanko

    Published 2013-06-01
    “…These elements are presented through the prism of comparative research of more than a dozen countries and consider the experience of diplomatic service legal regulation in the former Soviet Union countries as well as in other foreign countries.…”
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    Hermann Jakob Czernin von Chudenitz’ Diplomatic Mission in Warsaw in 1695. A Contribution towards the Travel Arrangements of Imperial Diplomats by Jiří Kubeš

    Published 2017-02-01
    “…The author first briefly introduces this mission and then, using it as an example, attempts to show how the travels of the imperial ambassadors of that time were organised and also unveils other additional aspects of the diplomatic service. Above all he reconstructed the court of Count Czernin, who was surrounded by over 80 people, and also located the place of his accommodation in Warsaw and showed which apartment the Count possessed as an ambassador. …”
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    The Nobility in Bohemia and in the Habsburg Monarchy within the Legal and Social Context of the 19th Century by Marie Macková

    Published 2016-03-01
    “…A more complex situation arose at a higher level of the Catholic hierarchy, whereas this trend manifested to its least extent within the diplomatic service. Meanwhile the nobility that did not have any direct ties to the Imperial Court was gradually losing-out. …”
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    A Science of Diplomacy by T. V. Zonova

    Published 2014-10-01
    “…The creation in 1973 of the Department of the diplomatic service and development of a new scientific field of diplomatic studies has brought tangible results already in 1970-1980. …”
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    Hermann Karl von Keyserlingk and the Recognition of the Russian Imperial Title by the Holy Roman Empire in 1745–1746 by M. A. Petrova

    Published 2021-12-01
    “…The article, based on the unpublished documents from the Archive of the Foreign Policy of the Russian Empire, reveals for the first time details of a little-known episode in the history of the Russian diplomatic service – the mission of Empress' Elisabeth I minister plenipotentiary Count of Courland Hermann Karl von Keyserlingk to Frankfurt am Main and Regensburg during the War of the Austrian Succession. …”
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    European and Integration Studies by N. Yu. Kaveshnikov

    Published 2014-10-01
    “…In the mid-1990s, having retired from diplomatic service, professor Yu. Matveevskiy started to work at MGIMO. …”
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    Čechoslováci pod ochranou císaře: Strastiplná cesta Bedřicha Hildprandta a Ferdinanda Veverky do etiopského exilu by Jan Dvořáček

    Published 2013-12-01
    “…Bedřich Hildprandt, belonging to aristocratic family Hildprandt of Ottenhausen, served as an administrator of the imperial stud farm in Addis Ababa, while Ferdinand Veverka became a diplomatic counselor at the imperial court in Addis Ababa, where he was largely using his previous vast experience from the Czechoslovak diplomatic services. Description of Hildprandt ́s and Veverka ́s lives is very close to the contributions that analyse a declining position of social elites in Czechoslovakia after 1918, as well as to those inquiries focused on Czechoslovak emigration in Sub-Saharan Africa. …”
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