Issues
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Contemporary History Discourses in Hungary after 1989
Institute of National Remembrance Review 2, 2020, pages 263–283.
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Scientific Exorcisms? The Memory of the Communist Security Apparatus and its Study in Romania after 1989
Institute of National Remembrance Review 2, 2020, pages 285–317.
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Problems with the Memory of Communism. Overview: Paweł Śpiewak. 2005. Pamięć po komunizmie [Memory of Communism].
Institute of National Remembrance Review, 2, 2020, pages 319–332
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Overview: Wojciech Materski. 2017. Od cara do “cara”. Studium rosyjskiej polityki historycznej [From the Tsar to the “Tsar”. A Study of the Russian Politics of Memory].
Institute of National Remembrance Review, 2, 2020, pages 335–359.
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Institute of National Remembrance Review 3, 2021-2022: Table of Contents
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Karol Nawrocki, President of the Institute of National Remembrance - Foreword
Institute of National Remembrance Review 3, 2021-2022.
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Editorial
Institute of National Remembrance Review 3, 2021-2022, pages 2-5.
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“…The Phrase that »History Does Not Matter to the Present Day« Was Never More Deceptive than It Is Now.” The Narrative of the Great Patriotic War in the Historians’ Assessment (Editors’ Debate) Warsaw, July 16, 2021
Institute of National Remembrance Review 3, 2021, pages 9-41.
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“I Have Slightly Pessimistic Picture Of Things...” Interview with Professor Jan Szumski, Senior Researcher of the Historical Research Office of the Institute of National Remembrance and Professor at the Institute of the History of Science of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw.
Institute of National Remembrance Review 3, 2021-2022, pages 43-75.
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The Religion of Victory, the Cult of a Superpower. The Myth of the Great Patriotic War in the Contemporary Foreign Policy of the Russian Federation
Institute of National Remembrance Review 3, 2021-2022, pages 77-125.