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About Susan Richards

Susan Richards is a non-executive director and founder of openDemocracy.

She has produced a number of feature films and written a prize-winning book, Epics of Everyday Life, about the lives of ordinary Russians in the transition from communism. Lost & Found in Russia, Encounters in the Deep Heartland, which covers the period 1992-2008, was published by IB Tauris in May 2009.

Articles by Susan Richards

Friday 12th August

On the eve of collapse: encounters in a changing Russia

Next week marks the twentieth anniversary of the August 1991 coup attempt. While this proved a dramatic final nail in the Soviet coffin, many more fundamental changes — the breaking down of information walls and the dissipation of fear — occurred in the months and years leading up to then. Susan Richards, oD Russia’s founder editor, spent much of this time traveling around Russia, talking to ordinary Russians about their lives. We reproduce two accounts here.
Thursday 12th May

An improbable team

It took an unlikely combination of talents to start building openDemocracy’s Tower of Babel, comments one of its founders
Monday 27th December

Russia's security services: back in charge, out of control

Russia’s security apparatus is back in charge — as powerful, and with less holding it back than ever before. Susan Richards reflects on Wikileaks and reviews a fascinating account of Russia's unofficial second state
Friday 19th November

Tolstoy: a life too large

What else could possibly be written about Tolstoy? Before reading Rosamund Bartlett’s new biography, Susan Richards did wonder. But the fall of Soviet power has revealed material which allows us to appreciate how vividly his legacy has lived on and how relevant it remains today
Monday 19th July

Liberating Pushkin

Russia’s greatest poet Alexander Pushkin is notoriously hard for non-Russian speakers to appreciate. So Susan Richards welcomes a concise new biography of the poet by his translator Robert Chandler which strips the varnish off
Thursday 5th November

Russia's drugs problem: blame the West

Why is Russia resisting international help with its spiralling drugs problem, asks Susan Richards? While the Kremlin's rhetoric reveals a profound insecurity, its policies are failing to deal effectively with the situation
Thursday 25th June

Lost and Found in Russia III: My Dream House

A re-encounter with lost friends in Russia-Ukraine's disputed land
Thursday 18th June

Lost and Found in Russia 2: Building Heaven or Hell

In this second excerpt from her new book, Susan Richards returns to Siberia four years later
Wednesday 10th June

Lost and Found in Russia: a visit to Marx

The first of three excerpts from our Russia editor's new book on the post-Soviet years
Wednesday 25th February

Russians don’t much like the West

The evidence that Russians' eye on the west - and its democratic model - is turning even colder
Thursday 3rd November

Georgia's Byzantine politics

The sacking of the French-born foreign minister has opened a new phase in Georgia’s troubled post-rose-revolution history. In Tbilisi, Susan Richards assesses the challenge facing a defiant Salome Zurabishvili.
Wednesday 23rd July

Chechnya and Iraq: imperial echoes, militant warnings

Military occupation, armed resistance, pervasive insecurity, the hunger for religious certainty, a compliant media and oil. The parallels between Russia’s war in Chechnya and America’s in Iraq are uncomfortably close. Will either ‘imperial’ power heed the warning they present?
Wednesday 5th February

The World's Fair

A new world is also a new way of seeing. The World Social Forum, warmed by the electoral success of Brazil's new president and infused by the energies of its global citizenry, offered openDemocracy confirmation that shifts of power and perspective go together. For Susan Richards, it all came together at Porto Alegre. 
Tuesday 17th December

More trouble in paradise

To the outside world, the bomb blast that hit the Mombasa Paradise Hotel on 28 November was the latest strike in al-Qaida’s “war” on Western targets. The local perspective is different. For the indigenous population of the Kenyan coastal region of Msumarini and the neighbouring villages of the Kilifi district, the bomb was just the latest calamity in the region’s downward spiral into poverty and banditry. Before the bombing, a recent Kenyan poll voted the Kilifi district as the third most likely in the country to erupt in violence.
Wednesday 30th October

Defending the Palace of Western Culture

The disastrous climax to the Chechen assault on a Moscow theatre inevitably recalls the tragedy of Manhattan. The phlegmatic reaction of ordinary Russians reveals not just a different emotional register, but a nationalist trigger-instinct that carries great dangers. Will this at least unite America and Russia? The managing editor of openDemocracy calls her Moscow friends, listens, argues – and warns.
Tuesday 19th March

The discussion

openDemocracy’s public meeting on 7 March 2002 at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London addressed the theme of ‘Women, Islam and Modernity’. Here is the audience discussion that ensued.
Wednesday 13th March

Responses on the night

During openDemocracy’s public meeting on 7 March 2002 at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London which addressed the theme of ‘Women, Islam and Modernity’, we asked the audience to suggest one positive thing that could be done to advance the dialogue between Muslim and non-Muslim women, or to register their comments. Read their accounts.
Wednesday 12th December

Russia changing

The impoverishment, corruption and violence of Russia’s first post-Soviet decade reinforced the fatalism in people’s hearts. In a recent visit to Moscow and Saratov, openDemocracy’s senior editor senses a shift. Political stability, modestly growing businesses, the respect of the West, and a leader who doesn’t shame people, are some ingredients of the mood. The inner change, palpable if not yet widely rooted, says: we can embrace the future and still be Russians.
Monday 8th October

Being open to surprise

The common, consoling wisdoms are already encrusting around 11 September and its aftermath. We need to return imaginatively to the surprise we felt that day, and learn its lessons.
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