Rural Adaptation in Russia

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Adaptation
adaptation strategies in Russian villages
agrarian transformation
Agrarian Transition
Belgorod Oblast
Category=JP
Chernyi Peredel
collective farming history
Collectivization
Depressed Mood Scores
District Administration
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Farm Enterprises
Household Enterprise
Household Monetary Income
Household Plot
Household Responses
land tenure systems
Large Farm Enterprises
Minimum Subsistence Level
Monthly Monetary Income
Novgorod Oblast
peasant livelihoods
Peasant Responses
post-Soviet agriculture
Poverty
Private Farmers
Private Farming Sector
Private Farms
Pskov Oblast
Regional Diversity
Rental Plots
Resistance Interpretation
rural poverty analysis
Rural Russia
Rural Russian Households
Russian Countryside
Sergo Ordzhonikidze
Social Origins
Soil Quality
Soviet Peasants
Stolypin Reforms
Twentieth Century

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415701556
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jul 2005
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The current dominant approach to Russian peasant behaviour emphasizes rural resistance to reform in broad terms, and to the introduction of market forces in particular. Bringing together some of the finest scholars on rural Russia, this groundbreaking volume examines this perception with an analysis of both historical and contemporary patterns of rural adaptation in Russia.

Four articles included analyze peasant responses in the post-Soviet era, and focus on:

* the relationship between poverty and rural adaptation
* the social origins of private farmers in southern Russia and Ukraine
* response patterns by large farms (formerly collective and state farms)
* household adaptation using a standardized set of criteria.

This fascinating book gives an illuminating picture of the ways in which peasants respond to new environmental conditions and stimuli created by reform. The substantive material included draws on fieldwork and survey data collected from rural Russia, from the Stolypin reforms in the pre-Soviet era, and collectivisation of agriculture during the 1930s in the Soviet era.

This book was previously as a special issue of The Journal of Peasant Studies.

Stephen K. Wegren is Professor of Political Science, Southern Methodist University. He has published widely on the politics and economics of post-communist reform in Russia.