Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation

Anabarski district in NW Sakha was traditionally a region with mixed hunting/reindeer herding economy. Unusual for tundra reindeer herding, domestic reindeer herding in the Anabar tundra contained many features typical of taiga reindeer herding (riding on mounted deer, milking). In the local economi...

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Published in:Nomadic Peoples
Main Author: Ventsel, Aimar
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: White Horse Press 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/np.2006.100205
https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/whp/nomp/2006/00000010/00000002/art00005
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spelling crwhitehorsepr:10.3167/np.2006.100205 2023-05-15T15:16:56+02:00 Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation Ventsel, Aimar 2006 http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/np.2006.100205 https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/whp/nomp/2006/00000010/00000002/art00005 en eng White Horse Press Nomadic Peoples volume 10, issue 2, page 68-86 ISSN 0822-7942 Demography journal-article 2006 crwhitehorsepr https://doi.org/10.3167/np.2006.100205 2023-01-24T21:29:54Z Anabarski district in NW Sakha was traditionally a region with mixed hunting/reindeer herding economy. Unusual for tundra reindeer herding, domestic reindeer herding in the Anabar tundra contained many features typical of taiga reindeer herding (riding on mounted deer, milking). In the local economic system, rich reindeer owners focused more on herding and poor people either worked for rich reindeer herders or left their animals in the herds of wealthy people and hunted seasonally for wild reindeer and Arctic foxes. Soviet agriculture incorporated this model into the collective farm ecology. While reindeer brigades focused on reindeer herding and hunted for their own needs, hunters migrated with small reindeer herds in their territory and left animals in the care of the reindeer brigades for the summer season. This practice continued up to the 'snowmobile revolution' in 1996. Although the reindeer economy prospered, i.e. the number of reindeer increased constantly, the district 'produced' meat of domestic reindeer only in these periods when the migration direction of wild reindeer was suitable. In post-socialist times, after the collapse of the planned economy, most native people of the district started to hunt intensively for subsistence, but in addition to this, private hunting enterprises emerged. At the same time, the government of the Republic of Sakha banned the slaughter of domestic reindeer. Since domestic reindeer were thus removed from the economic sphere, people in reindeer brigades either left for hunting enterprises or started to hunt wild reindeer to sell meat in order to have extra income. In this article, I argue that the hunter–herder continuum and the model of land use in the Anabarski district was adapted as an economic strategy in Soviet industrial agriculture and resisted general reindeer herding standards based on Komi commercial reindeer herding. This continuum made the shift from the Soviet into the post-Soviet economy easier and regulated the use of common pool resources of the tundra ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Republic of Sakha Sakha taiga Tundra Siberia White Horse Press Journals (via Crossref) Arctic Sakha Slaughter ENVELOPE(-85.633,-85.633,-78.617,-78.617) Anabar ENVELOPE(113.624,113.624,73.286,73.286) Nomadic Peoples 10 2 68 86
institution Open Polar
collection White Horse Press Journals (via Crossref)
op_collection_id crwhitehorsepr
language English
topic Demography
spellingShingle Demography
Ventsel, Aimar
Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation
topic_facet Demography
description Anabarski district in NW Sakha was traditionally a region with mixed hunting/reindeer herding economy. Unusual for tundra reindeer herding, domestic reindeer herding in the Anabar tundra contained many features typical of taiga reindeer herding (riding on mounted deer, milking). In the local economic system, rich reindeer owners focused more on herding and poor people either worked for rich reindeer herders or left their animals in the herds of wealthy people and hunted seasonally for wild reindeer and Arctic foxes. Soviet agriculture incorporated this model into the collective farm ecology. While reindeer brigades focused on reindeer herding and hunted for their own needs, hunters migrated with small reindeer herds in their territory and left animals in the care of the reindeer brigades for the summer season. This practice continued up to the 'snowmobile revolution' in 1996. Although the reindeer economy prospered, i.e. the number of reindeer increased constantly, the district 'produced' meat of domestic reindeer only in these periods when the migration direction of wild reindeer was suitable. In post-socialist times, after the collapse of the planned economy, most native people of the district started to hunt intensively for subsistence, but in addition to this, private hunting enterprises emerged. At the same time, the government of the Republic of Sakha banned the slaughter of domestic reindeer. Since domestic reindeer were thus removed from the economic sphere, people in reindeer brigades either left for hunting enterprises or started to hunt wild reindeer to sell meat in order to have extra income. In this article, I argue that the hunter–herder continuum and the model of land use in the Anabarski district was adapted as an economic strategy in Soviet industrial agriculture and resisted general reindeer herding standards based on Komi commercial reindeer herding. This continuum made the shift from the Soviet into the post-Soviet economy easier and regulated the use of common pool resources of the tundra ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ventsel, Aimar
author_facet Ventsel, Aimar
author_sort Ventsel, Aimar
title Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation
title_short Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation
title_full Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation
title_fullStr Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation
title_full_unstemmed Hunter–Herder Continuum in Anabarski District, NW Sakha, Siberia, Russian Federation
title_sort hunter–herder continuum in anabarski district, nw sakha, siberia, russian federation
publisher White Horse Press
publishDate 2006
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/np.2006.100205
https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/whp/nomp/2006/00000010/00000002/art00005
long_lat ENVELOPE(-85.633,-85.633,-78.617,-78.617)
ENVELOPE(113.624,113.624,73.286,73.286)
geographic Arctic
Sakha
Slaughter
Anabar
geographic_facet Arctic
Sakha
Slaughter
Anabar
genre Arctic
Republic of Sakha
Sakha
taiga
Tundra
Siberia
genre_facet Arctic
Republic of Sakha
Sakha
taiga
Tundra
Siberia
op_source Nomadic Peoples
volume 10, issue 2, page 68-86
ISSN 0822-7942
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3167/np.2006.100205
container_title Nomadic Peoples
container_volume 10
container_issue 2
container_start_page 68
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