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New Mobilities and Social Changes in Russia's Arctic Regions: Routledge Research in Polar Regions

Editat de Marlene Laruelle
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 2 aug 2016
This book provides the first in-depth, multidisciplinary study of re-urbanization in Russia’s Arctic regions, with a specific focus on new mobility patterns, and the resulting birth of new urban Arctic identities in which newcomers and labor migrants form a rising part of. It is an invaluable reference for all those interested in current trends in circumpolar regions, showing how the Arctic region is becoming more diverse culturally, but also more integrated into globalized trends in terms of economic development, urban sustainability and migration.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781138191471
ISBN-10: 1138191477
Pagini: 232
Ilustrații: 78
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Research in Polar Regions

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Cuprins

Introduction (Marlene Laruelle)Part I: An Evolving Demographic, Political, and Economic Context
1. Depopulation of Russia’s Asian North and the Impact on Political Development (Nikolay Petrov)
2. Shaping Russia’s New Arctic: The Union of Cities in the Arctic and the High North (Genevieve Parente)
3. Reluctant Entrepreneurs of the Russian Far North (Aimar Ventsel)
Part II: New Mobility Patterns
4. Migration Cycles, Social Capital, and Networks: A New Way to Look at Arctic Mobility (Nadezhda Zamyatina and Alexey Yashunsky)
5. Infinite Travel: The Impact of Labor Conditions on Mobility Potential in the Northern Russian Petroleum Industry (Gertrude Saxinger)
6. The Urbanization of Indigenous Peoples of Northeastern Siberia (Vera Kuklina and Natalia Krasnoshtanova)
Part III: A Growing Multiculturalism
7. Social Dynamics and Sustainability of BAM Communities: Migration, Competition for Resources, and Intergroup Relations (Olga Povoroznyuk)
8. Murmansk: A City’s Soviet Identity and its Transforming Diversity (Marlene Laruelle, Sophie Hohmann, and Alexandra Burtsveva)
9. Ugra, the Dagestani North: An Anthropology of Mobility Between the North Caucasus and Western Siberia (Denis Sokolov)
Bibliography
Contributors

Notă biografică

Marlene Laruelle is Associate Director of the Institute for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies (IERES) and Research Professor of International Affairs at the Elliott School of International Affairs, The George Washington University, USA.

Recenzii

"The book is an excellent piece of collective work and a must read for all those concerned with or interested in Arctic societies. By bringing forward complexity, dynamics and contradictions of northern mobilities, the book has a potential to mobilise new social research in the Russian Arctic and beyond."
Andrey N. Petrov, Director, ARCTICenter and Associate Professor, University of Northern Iowa, USA

Descriere

This book provides the first in-depth, multidisciplinary study of re-urbanization in Russia’s Arctic regions, with a specific focus on new mobility patterns, and the resulting birth of new urban Arctic identities in which newcomers and labor migrants form a rising part of. It is an invaluable reference for all those interested in current trends in circumpolar regions, showing how the Arctic region is becoming more diverse culturally, but also more integrated into globalized trends in terms of economic development, urban sustainability and migration.