This paper investigates how, under increasing land pressure during Russian settlement in Kazakh steppes in the late-XIXth century, family-based institutions and social structure of Kazakhs evolved to adapt to new economic conditions. Using a rich dataset constructed from Russian colonial expedition materials, we find that during the transition from nomadic pastoralism to a semi-sedentary pastoralist-agriculture system, the size of Kazakh extended families increased, those of communes and clans decreased, and that Kazakhs identified stronger with lower levels of genealogical clan system. Within families, property rights on land became more individualized, households became less likely to pool labor to farm, and wage labor contracts in agricu...
Based on research in Russian and Kazakhstani archives, this article investigates connections between...
This articles explores historical legacies of the of the Imperial Mongolia and Russia in Central Asi...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Almost every country on the planet has a colonial past...
We study how Russian colonization of the Kazakh steppes in the late 19th century influenced the evol...
This article investigates how, with increasing land pressure during Russian settlement in Kazakh ste...
The main aim of the research is to analyse the process of transformation of the nomadic Kazakh socie...
This article reflects the results of a comparative analysis of historical sources that show the natu...
After the military conquest of the Kazakh Steppe in 1920, Russian and Kazakh Bolsheviks implemented ...
For quite some time, the population dynamics in Kazakhstan have largely depended on migration proces...
This thesis examines the phenomenon of Chala-Qazaqs: groups of mixed ethnic origin who lived in the ...
International audienceFrom camp to village: sedentarisation and transformations of the Kazakh aul du...
The paper focuses on the Central Asian region inhabited by nomadic Kazakhs and Kyrgyz, along with Ru...
Of all the Tsar’s former subjects, the Kazakh nomad made perhaps the most unlikely communist. Follow...
AbstractBy the middle of XV century in Dasht-i Kipchak reinforce ethnic, political association Kazak...
Based on research in Russian and Kazakhstani archives, this article investigates connections between...
Based on research in Russian and Kazakhstani archives, this article investigates connections between...
This articles explores historical legacies of the of the Imperial Mongolia and Russia in Central Asi...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Almost every country on the planet has a colonial past...
We study how Russian colonization of the Kazakh steppes in the late 19th century influenced the evol...
This article investigates how, with increasing land pressure during Russian settlement in Kazakh ste...
The main aim of the research is to analyse the process of transformation of the nomadic Kazakh socie...
This article reflects the results of a comparative analysis of historical sources that show the natu...
After the military conquest of the Kazakh Steppe in 1920, Russian and Kazakh Bolsheviks implemented ...
For quite some time, the population dynamics in Kazakhstan have largely depended on migration proces...
This thesis examines the phenomenon of Chala-Qazaqs: groups of mixed ethnic origin who lived in the ...
International audienceFrom camp to village: sedentarisation and transformations of the Kazakh aul du...
The paper focuses on the Central Asian region inhabited by nomadic Kazakhs and Kyrgyz, along with Ru...
Of all the Tsar’s former subjects, the Kazakh nomad made perhaps the most unlikely communist. Follow...
AbstractBy the middle of XV century in Dasht-i Kipchak reinforce ethnic, political association Kazak...
Based on research in Russian and Kazakhstani archives, this article investigates connections between...
Based on research in Russian and Kazakhstani archives, this article investigates connections between...
This articles explores historical legacies of the of the Imperial Mongolia and Russia in Central Asi...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Almost every country on the planet has a colonial past...