@misc{_Wschodnioznawstwo_2022, address={Wrocław}, howpublished={online}, year={2022}, publisher={Oficyna Wydawnicza Arboretum}, language={pol}, language={rus}, language={eng}, abstract={„Yearbook of Eastern Studies” („Wschodnioznawstwo”) has been established as a forum for the debate on the multifaceted nature of transformations in Central and Eastern Europe and Asia, with particular focus on the post-Soviet area. The conceptual content of the periodical was born thanks to the professors Zdzislaw J. Winnicki and Walenty Baluk, who edited the first three volumes, which were published formally as separate monographs, but already under the banner of „Wschodnioznawstwo”. Since 2010, the Yearbook has the status of a scientific journal, and two years later it has been listed on the journals of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education. From 2020, the editor-in-chief is Dr. Tomasz Szyszlak. In addition, the periodical is indexed in national and international databases such as BazHum Index Copernicus, Central European Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, European Refrence Index for the Humanities and the Social Sciences (ERIH PLUS), and Polska Bibliografia Naukowa. The scientific profile of the periodical, which has consistently been implemented since the beginning of the activity of „Yearbook of Eastern Studies”, focuses on the field of social sciences, with particular emphasis on the science of politics and science of safety. Its great advantage is its internationalization, which manifests itself both in terms of composition of the scientific council, reviewers, and authors of texts published in the „Wschodnioznawstwo” in Polish, English and Russian languages. Up to now, researchers from Poland, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Czech Republic, Georgia, Germany, Hungary, Japan, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Macedonia, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Turkey and Ukraine have published on the cards of the journal.}, type={text}, title={Wschodnioznawstwo 2022}, keywords={Middle East, geopolitics, geoeconomics, Arab Spring, democracy, political system, terrorism, climate change, North Africa, Bahrain, Yemen, protests, Shiites, discrimination, Persian Gulf, Israel, security, European Union, Poland, Belarus, migration crisis, immigration policy, asylum policy, migrants, Poland-Belarus border crisis, non-governmental organizations, humanitarian aid, Ukraine, post-Soviet area, international bilateral relations, Polish-Belarusian border, economic cooperation, New Silk Road, economic migration, Gagauzia, Transnistria, economic security, societal security, Bulgaria, national and ethnic minorities, Turkish minority, cultural security, Turkish minority in the Balkans, USSR, Post-Soviet states, demography, migrations, migratory waves, aliyah, radicalism, extremism, Muslims, Netherlands, re-education camps, internment camps`, Uyghurs, securitization, power relations, Critical Discourse Analysis, the Roman, government programs / country strategies towards the Roma community, public policy, Lubusz voivodeship, Russian Federation, Cossacks, subethnos, national security system, the Second Polish Republic, Lithuania, dispute, threat, historiography, Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact, foreign policy, international legal assessment, diplomatic activity, Germany, eastern Germany policy in the 1990s, Republic of Belarus, parliamentary republic, authoritarianism, civil society, energy security, energy transformation, power sector}, }