This article examines and problematizes the historic case of famine in Kazakhstan in 1931-33 to illustrate that ‘starvation', ‘famine,' or ‘food crisis' occurred primarily because of ‘knowledgeable neglect' by the Soviet governance system in order to pursue the priorities of modern development, such as industrialization in the context of overall social modernization of population. The paper also explores the concepts of ‘famine' through Malthusianism, ‘entitlement approach' and ‘new famine'. It also explains the biopolitical implications of these concepts using the historical case of the 1931-1933 famine in Kazakhstan. The case shows that particular Soviet government policies and political decisions by individual officials to worsened the c...
The article examines a range of questions tied to Nazi Germany’s socio-economic policies in occupied...
Russian rulers recognized the principle that ‘good government’ nourishes its people in bad years. Th...
The Soviet famines occupy a crucial, exemplar position within the larger context of human-provoked ...
This article examines and problematizes the historic case of famine in Kazakhstan in 1931-33 to illu...
Between 1928 to 1932 a great famine took place in parts of the Soviet Union due to the forced collec...
The article outlines the policies of the Soviet state towards the Kazakh herdsmen between the 1928 c...
The article presents the consequences of the famine of 1921–1923, which affected many regions of the...
Famines in the main are man-made and not merely caused by the occurrences of food shortages, due to ...
he article places the great famine in Kazakhstan (1931-33) in the context of policies implemented by...
ABSTRACT: The article is devoted to a historical and geographical overview of the famine in Kazakhst...
1932 belongs to the wider history of collectivization in the USSR and, more specifically, the campai...
Famine spread across the Union of Social Soviet Republics in 1932 and 1933, a deadly though unantici...
The article presents a comprehensive analysis of the Ukrainian famine of 1921-1923, challenging the ...
Kazakhstan was a Soviet republic in which nomadic or semi-nomadic herdsmen constituted an exceptiona...
Territorial expansion of the 1933 famine is a matter of dispute between Ukrainian and Russian histor...
The article examines a range of questions tied to Nazi Germany’s socio-economic policies in occupied...
Russian rulers recognized the principle that ‘good government’ nourishes its people in bad years. Th...
The Soviet famines occupy a crucial, exemplar position within the larger context of human-provoked ...
This article examines and problematizes the historic case of famine in Kazakhstan in 1931-33 to illu...
Between 1928 to 1932 a great famine took place in parts of the Soviet Union due to the forced collec...
The article outlines the policies of the Soviet state towards the Kazakh herdsmen between the 1928 c...
The article presents the consequences of the famine of 1921–1923, which affected many regions of the...
Famines in the main are man-made and not merely caused by the occurrences of food shortages, due to ...
he article places the great famine in Kazakhstan (1931-33) in the context of policies implemented by...
ABSTRACT: The article is devoted to a historical and geographical overview of the famine in Kazakhst...
1932 belongs to the wider history of collectivization in the USSR and, more specifically, the campai...
Famine spread across the Union of Social Soviet Republics in 1932 and 1933, a deadly though unantici...
The article presents a comprehensive analysis of the Ukrainian famine of 1921-1923, challenging the ...
Kazakhstan was a Soviet republic in which nomadic or semi-nomadic herdsmen constituted an exceptiona...
Territorial expansion of the 1933 famine is a matter of dispute between Ukrainian and Russian histor...
The article examines a range of questions tied to Nazi Germany’s socio-economic policies in occupied...
Russian rulers recognized the principle that ‘good government’ nourishes its people in bad years. Th...
The Soviet famines occupy a crucial, exemplar position within the larger context of human-provoked ...