Khramov is quoted in a February 2023 story with
The Guardian as part of a team from Russia and Poland that discovered "fossils of oldest known potential pollinators." In addition to academic and popular work related to paleontology, Khramov writes about paleontology, postcolonial research, the theory of nationalism, the history of the relationship between science and religion,
philosophy of science, and Christian theology with articles published in Russian and English for the journals
International Journal of Orthodox Theology,
Philosophy and Epistemology of Science,
Inviolable Reserve,
Issues of Nationalism, and
State, Religion, Church. Khramov is the author of three books in Russian:
Catechesis of the National Democrat (
Катехизис национал-демократа) in 2011,
Monkey and Adam: Can a Christian be an Evolutionist? (
Обезьяна и Адам: Может ли христианин быть эволюционистом?) in 2019, and
A Brief History of Insects (
Краткая история насекомых) in 2022. In November 2010, Khramov along with Anton Susov established the Russian Civic Union (
Russkii grazhdanskii soiuz or RGS). Igor Torbakov, writing in 2015 for
George Washington University’s
Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization, named Khramov among the leading writers and organizers of the "'Third Wave' of the Russian nationalist movement" that was "the most serious challenge to Russia's powers-that-be" as they argued that "throughout Russian history there existed an eternal contradiction between the mass of Russian people (who served as a principal human resource for empire-building) and a largely cosmopolitan imperial elite." In 2015, Khramov defended his dissertation «Jurassic Neuroptera of Central Asia» («Юрские сетчатокрылые (Insecta: Neuroptera) Центральной Азии») and became a Candidate of Biological Sciences. Khramov has defended the idea of a
meta-historical human fall. He said in a 2017 article that the Big Bang should not be interpreted as the "first creative act of God" but as the "first cognizable manifestation of the human fall". He was influenced by Russian religious philosophers
Nikolai Berdyaev and
Evgenii Troubetzkoy and contended that every Christian writer before
Augustine believed that all creation was "altered drastically after man's disobedience". Having the fall located outside of the theorized Big Bang means that Khramov considers the entire
history of evolution on earth to follow after the human fall as he further argued in his 2019 book. ==Books==