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  1. Women in Transnistria are women who live in or are from Transnistria (may also be spelled as Transdniestria; and also known as the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic, abbreviated as PMR). Population. Based on the census conducted in 2004, 54% of 555,000 people are composed of women; of which 21% of those women are aged over 60 years old. [1]

  2. Snap. Jeremy Suyker y Nicolas Leblanc son dos fotógrafos franceses cuyo trabajo los ha llevado a lugares remotos, mientras el resto de nosotros nos sentamos en nuestros cubículos, moldeando ...

  3. The women of Transnistria are a total knock out. Jeremy Suyker and Nicolas Leblanc are two French photographers whose work takes them to faraway places, while the rest of us sit in our cubicles ...

  4. Rîbnița, zona norte de Transnistria. En la Alta Edad Media la región estaba poblada por las tribus eslavas de los úliches y tíveros, así como por nómadas túrquicos como los pechenegos y los cumanos.Fue parte del Rus de Kiev en varias ocasiones y parte integrante del Gran Ducado de Lituania en el siglo xv.El área pasó a estar bajo el control del Imperio otomano en 1504 y casi tres ...

  5. 26 de abr. de 2018 · The red shoes of Transnistrian women. Domestic violence and human trafficking are some of the key issues facing Transnistrian women but while local NGOs focus on victim support, the patriarchal attitudes towards women in society remain mostly untouched. Young female activists hope to fight them through art.

  6. Photographs and text by Julia Autz. Along the northeastern border of Ukraine, there lies a small strip of land known as Transnistria. Officially, this territory is a part of Moldova, but during the collapse of the Soviet Union, the region declared its independence.

  7. Few women are included in the political elite; only 2 women sit in the parliament. However, women are able to exercise political rights and participate in campaigns. While Transnistria has three official languages—Russian, Ukrainian, and Moldovan—Russian is used in governmental affairs.