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Russia's Unknown Agriculture
Household Production in Post-Socialist Rural Russia

Judith Pallot and Tat'yana Nefedova

Price: £60.00 (Hardback)
ISBN-13: 978-0-19-922741-9
Publication date: 23 August 2007
240 pages, numerous halftone plates, tables and figures, 234x156 mm
Series: Oxford Geographical and Environmental Studies Series
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Description
Basing their findings on four years of research during which they studied rural districts drawn from a variety of contrasting regions of European Russia, the authors discuss the place of rural households in Russia's agri-food production system. They show that far from being solely concerned with 'survival' household plots in contemporary Russia are increasingly used to produce crops and livestock products for the market. In the book they describe the rich variety of forms that small and independent farming takes today from highly localised clusters of cucumber or tomato producers to specialization in crop or animal husbandry at a higher spatial scale or associated with particular ethnic groups. The authors systematically examine the influence on past and present practices of distance and the environment, the state of the large farm sector, local customs, and ethnicity on what households produce and how they produce it often using case studies of people they have met (plot holders, farmers, local officials) to illustrate their point. They criticise the tendency of the household production to be treated as the agricultural 'Other' in post-Soviet Russia and argue with the right incentives it has the potential for further development.

Readership: Scholars and students of geography and environmental studies, and readers interested in the history of the region's development and its environmental change.

Contents
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

Authors, editors, and contributors


Judith Pallot, Official Student of Christ Church and University Lecturer in the School of Geography (OUCE) and
Tat'yana Nefedova, Senior Researcher, the Institute of Geography, the Russian Academy of Sciences


Links to web resources and related information
More in the same subject area:
Human geography
Economic geography

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