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Russia's Unknown Agriculture
Household Production in Post-Communist Russia
von Judith Pallot, Tat'yana Nefedova
Verlag: Oxford University Press (UK)
Reihe: Oxford Geographical and Enviro
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-19-922741-9
Erschienen am 11.10.2007
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 241 mm [H] x 167 mm [B] x 20 mm [T]
Gewicht: 550 Gramm
Umfang: 238 Seiten

Preis: 151,50 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Judith Pallot: Since 1980 Official Student of Christ Church - tutor in geography - and lecturer in the Oxford centre of the Environment where she gives lectures and classes on the former Soviet Union and Russia. Prior to 1980 Judith Pallot taught at Leeds University. She has been involved in Russian Studies since the early 1970s, and made her first extended visit to Russia as a post graduate in 1971. Her research initially focused on the historical geography of the Russian peasantry and was based on the use of Russian archives but with the collapse of communism and the possibility of conducting research in the field, she changed the focus to the current period. She has always been fascinated by the experiences and livelihoods of marginal social groups. Recently, she has begun working on Russia's penal regions.
Tat'yana Nefedova is one of Russia's best known geographers. She has specialized since she joined the Academy of Science's Institute of Geography in 1978 in rural and agricultural geography and she is an acknowledged expert in the regional differentiation of Russian agriculture, in production in the large farm (kolkhoz and sovkhoz) sector and in problems of agricultural land use. Her interests extend beyond agricultural geography to consider regional development, in general and she has been involved in collaborative projects with economist and sociologists, as well as geographers, both in Russia and in Europe and the USA. The current book (and the Russian version - Neizvestnaya sel'skoe khozyaistvo,ili zachem nuzhna korova) has brought her into a productive collaboration with Dr Judith Pallot and enabled her to write about her favourite subject - the development of independent farming in Russia.



  • 1: Meeting Ana Petrovna and others

  • 2: The practice and theory of personal subsidiary farming in Soviet and Russian agriculture

  • 3: The geographical diversity of rural household production

  • 4: The environmental resources of rural people's farms

  • 5: Household Production and the Large Farm Sector

  • 6: Ethno-cultural differentiation in household production

  • 7: Household production's nearest neighbours: small and independent farming in the Russian countryside

  • 8: Whither the household sector?

  • Bibliography



In this book the authors draw on extensive field work that took them over a five year period to a variety of Russian regions. By describing the forms of small farming they found in these regions, the authors uncover for the reader Russia's 'unknown agriculture', speculating about the role it will have in Russia's future.


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