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・ Soviet War Memorial (Treptower Park)
・ Soviet War Memorial (Vienna)
・ Soviet Water Polo Championship
・ Soviet Weekly
・ Soviet westward offensive of 1918–19
・ Soviet Wings
・ Soviet Wings Sport Palace
・ Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan
・ Soviet women in World War II
・ Soviet Women's Basketball Championship
・ Soviet Women's Handball Championship
・ Soviet working class
・ Soviet World War II destroyers
・ Soviet-era statues
・ Soviet-type economic planning
Sovietization
・ Sovietization of the Baltic states
・ Sovietske
・ Sovietskyi
・ Sovietskyi Raion
・ Soviet–Afghan War
・ Soviet–Afghan War in popular culture
・ Soviet–Albanian Friendship Society
・ Soviet–Albanian split
・ Soviet–Canadian 1988 Polar Bridge Expedition
・ Soviet–Estonian Mutual Assistance Treaty
・ Soviet–Estonian Non-Aggression Pact
・ Soviet–Finnish Non-Aggression Pact
・ Soviet–Japanese Basic Convention
・ Soviet–Japanese border conflicts


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Sovietization : ウィキペディア英語版
Sovietization

Sovietization is the adoption of a political system based on the model of soviets (workers' councils) or the adoption of a way of life and mentality modelled after the Soviet Union.
A notable wave of Sovietization (in the second meaning) occurred in Mongolia and later during and after World War II in Central Europe (Czechoslovakia, German Democratic Republic, Hungary, Poland etc.). In a broad sense, this included (mostly involuntary) adoption of Soviet-like institutions, laws, customs, traditions and the Soviet way of life, both on a national level and in smaller communities. This was usually promoted and speeded up by propaganda aimed at creating a common way of life in all states within the Soviet sphere of influence. In many cases, Sovietization was also accompanied by forced resettlement of large categories of "class enemies" (kulaks, or ''osadniks'', for instance) to the Gulag labor camps and exile settlements.
In a narrow sense, the term ''Sovietization'' is often applied to mental and social changes within the population of the Soviet Union and its satellites which led to creation of the ''new Soviet man'' (according to its supporters) or ''Homo Sovieticus'' (according to its critics).
Most recently the term "Sovietization" is applied in a derogatory sense to processes in Russia under Vladimir Putin, with various authors putting various, often mutually contradictory, meanings in the word referring to various attributes of the former Soviet Union.
== See also ==

*Sovietization of the Baltic states
* Russification

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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