'Fragmented Belonging' on Russia's Western Frontier and Local Government Development in Karelia

"Karelia is a forestry-rich region on Russia's Northwestern frontier. This article shows how institutional arrangements for local government were a product of contending efforts of Western donors and other transnational actors, the federal and regional governments, as well as municipalitie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lankina, Tomila
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: World Resources Institute, DC, USA 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10535/3883
Description
Summary:"Karelia is a forestry-rich region on Russia's Northwestern frontier. This article shows how institutional arrangements for local government were a product of contending efforts of Western donors and other transnational actors, the federal and regional governments, as well as municipalities. Russia's federal recentralizing reforms and broader authoritarian context notwithstanding, Karelia illustrates how the choice of local institutions, as well as ideas about representation and citizenship are increasingly shaped by actors beyond the central state. Borrowing insights from Joel Migdal and Jesse Ribot, it argues that the result is shifting cognitive boundaries and 'fragmented belonging' or multiple reference points of local citizens in a dynamic process of contestation and re-contestation of citizenship."