From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British historian and political scientist
Andrew Wilson (born 1961) is a British
historian and political scientist specializing in
Eastern Europe, particularly
Ukraine. He is a Senior Policy Fellow at the
European Council on Foreign Relations, and Professor in Ukrainian studies at the
School of Slavonic and East European Studies at
University College London.
[1] He wrote The Ukrainians: The Story of How a People Became a Nation (the first four editions were titled The Ukrainians: An Unexpected Nation) and Virtual Politics: Faking Democracy in the Post-Soviet World.
Wilson is a member of the
Ukraine Today media organization's International Supervisory Council.
[2]
He was born in
Cumbria,
United Kingdom.
Works
- Ukraine: Perestroika to Independence (with Taras Kuzio), New York, St. Martin's Press, 1994, xiv, 260p.
ISBN
0-312-08652-0.
- Ukrainian Nationalism in the 1990s: A Minority Faith, Cambridge University Press, 1996, xvii, 300p.
ISBN
0-521-48285-2
ISBN
0-521-57457-9 Can be searched at
Google print.
- The Ukrainians: The Story of How a People Became a Nation, New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2000, 2015, xviii, 366p.
ISBN
0-300-08355-6, 2nd edition 2002
ISBN
0-300-09309-8, 3rd edition 2009
ISBN
978-0300154764, 4th edition 2015
ISBN
978-0300217254, 5th edition 2022
ISBN
978-0300269406.
- Virtual Politics: Faking Democracy in the Post-Soviet World, Yale University Press, 2005,
ISBN
0-300-09545-7.
- Ukraine's Orange Revolution, Yale University Press, 2005,
ISBN
0-300-11290-4.
- Belarus: The Last European Dictatorship, Yale University Press, 2012,
ISBN
978-0-300-13435-3.
- Ukraine Crisis: What it Means for the West, Yale University Press, 2014,
ISBN
978-0-300-21159-7.
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