This paper contributes to the discussion concerning the way in which Soviet state policies have influenced the lives, social organization, economy and culture of a group of indigenous Komi reindeer herders of northern Russia: its main focus is to explain how these policies have changed the herders’ patterns of migration and land use. Extensive anthropological fieldwork—to determine current and past herding practices—was carried out and archives were thoroughly investigated to document land use changes in relation to state reindeer herding policies. It was found that compared with those of several decades ago, the migration routes are now much shorter, as the herders have abandoned large areas of winter pastures located in the southernmost p...
This article explores changing work patterns in the Skolt Sámi reindeer herding community of Sevetti...
In this paper, ethnographic material on the Komi reindeer herders of eastern Bolshezemelskaya tundra...
Abstract: At present (in 1999) there are approximately 1.5 million semi-domesticated and 1.3 million...
This article examines the phenomenon of nomadic reindeer herding in the Severnaia Sosva river basin....
Reindeer herding in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, as in many other regions across the Russian North...
Abstract: This paper analyses trends in domesticated reindeer numbers at the federal, regional, and ...
This paper is based on field experience in the tundra camp of a reindeer-herding brigade with mixed ...
This article raises a problem of reindeer herding types. On the basis of ethnographic flieldwork dat...
Most commentators on Siberian reindeer herding conclude that the dramatic drop in the numbers of dom...
This paper summarizes work with two Evenki reindeer herding collectives in the Severo-Baikal’skoe na...
Abstract: This paper is based on field experience in the tundra camp of a reindeer-herding brigade w...
Privatization of state farms in Russia precipitated a crisis in the reindeer herding economy. This p...
Anabarski district in NW Sakha was traditionally a district with mixed hunting/reindeer herding econ...
30 years after socialism many groups of Evenki reindeer herders failed to survive in the suboreal ta...
In many areas across Siberia, the reindeer herding economy of the native people went into a deep rec...
This article explores changing work patterns in the Skolt Sámi reindeer herding community of Sevetti...
In this paper, ethnographic material on the Komi reindeer herders of eastern Bolshezemelskaya tundra...
Abstract: At present (in 1999) there are approximately 1.5 million semi-domesticated and 1.3 million...
This article examines the phenomenon of nomadic reindeer herding in the Severnaia Sosva river basin....
Reindeer herding in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, as in many other regions across the Russian North...
Abstract: This paper analyses trends in domesticated reindeer numbers at the federal, regional, and ...
This paper is based on field experience in the tundra camp of a reindeer-herding brigade with mixed ...
This article raises a problem of reindeer herding types. On the basis of ethnographic flieldwork dat...
Most commentators on Siberian reindeer herding conclude that the dramatic drop in the numbers of dom...
This paper summarizes work with two Evenki reindeer herding collectives in the Severo-Baikal’skoe na...
Abstract: This paper is based on field experience in the tundra camp of a reindeer-herding brigade w...
Privatization of state farms in Russia precipitated a crisis in the reindeer herding economy. This p...
Anabarski district in NW Sakha was traditionally a district with mixed hunting/reindeer herding econ...
30 years after socialism many groups of Evenki reindeer herders failed to survive in the suboreal ta...
In many areas across Siberia, the reindeer herding economy of the native people went into a deep rec...
This article explores changing work patterns in the Skolt Sámi reindeer herding community of Sevetti...
In this paper, ethnographic material on the Komi reindeer herders of eastern Bolshezemelskaya tundra...
Abstract: At present (in 1999) there are approximately 1.5 million semi-domesticated and 1.3 million...