The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia

The World Ocean and, in particular, its resource potential have always had a dramatic effect on the progress and spatial organisation of humanity. Recently, the effect of the sea factor on the economy and the settlement system has increased amid globalisation, geoeconomic changes, increasing geopoli...

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Main Author: Druzhinin Alexander
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/quageo.2019.38.issue-2/quageo-2019-0017/quageo-2019-0017.xml?format=INT
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:vrs:quageo:v:38:y:2019:i:2:p:91-100:n:4 2023-05-15T15:10:28+02:00 The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia Druzhinin Alexander https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/quageo.2019.38.issue-2/quageo-2019-0017/quageo-2019-0017.xml?format=INT unknown https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/quageo.2019.38.issue-2/quageo-2019-0017/quageo-2019-0017.xml?format=INT article ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:33:18Z The World Ocean and, in particular, its resource potential have always had a dramatic effect on the progress and spatial organisation of humanity. Recently, the effect of the sea factor on the economy and the settlement system has increased amid globalisation, geoeconomic changes, increasing geopolitical turbulence, and the growing competition for resources. In this article, I attempt to assess the influence of the sea factor on the socioeconomic geography of the Russian Federation. A country with an extensive coastline and a vast inland area, Russia has territories that are very different in geographical terms. I pay special attention to the post-Soviet changes in the major components of the country’s maritime economy: seaports, fishing industry, offshore production, recreation, etc. Another focus is the assessment of these industries’ impact on the development of the coastal areas. I demonstrate the growing dependence between the maritime economy and the economic development of Russia’s inland regions. I identify the key natural geographic, foreign economy, settlement-related, and geopolitical factors of the coastalisation of the economy, infrastructure, and population, observed in Russia today. This process is taking place in the Baltic, Black, and Caspian Sea areas, as well as in the Arctic and Pacific regions of the country. I conclude that Russia’s integration into the system of multi-dimensional Eurasian partnerships (including the Belt and Road initiative) and the ‘turn to the East’ contribute to both the further ‘marinisation’ of Russian space and the differentiation of coastal zones by the level and rates of socio-economic development. socio-economic dynamics, coastal zones, Russia, Eurasia, World Ocean, geopolitics, geo-economics Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Arctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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description The World Ocean and, in particular, its resource potential have always had a dramatic effect on the progress and spatial organisation of humanity. Recently, the effect of the sea factor on the economy and the settlement system has increased amid globalisation, geoeconomic changes, increasing geopolitical turbulence, and the growing competition for resources. In this article, I attempt to assess the influence of the sea factor on the socioeconomic geography of the Russian Federation. A country with an extensive coastline and a vast inland area, Russia has territories that are very different in geographical terms. I pay special attention to the post-Soviet changes in the major components of the country’s maritime economy: seaports, fishing industry, offshore production, recreation, etc. Another focus is the assessment of these industries’ impact on the development of the coastal areas. I demonstrate the growing dependence between the maritime economy and the economic development of Russia’s inland regions. I identify the key natural geographic, foreign economy, settlement-related, and geopolitical factors of the coastalisation of the economy, infrastructure, and population, observed in Russia today. This process is taking place in the Baltic, Black, and Caspian Sea areas, as well as in the Arctic and Pacific regions of the country. I conclude that Russia’s integration into the system of multi-dimensional Eurasian partnerships (including the Belt and Road initiative) and the ‘turn to the East’ contribute to both the further ‘marinisation’ of Russian space and the differentiation of coastal zones by the level and rates of socio-economic development. socio-economic dynamics, coastal zones, Russia, Eurasia, World Ocean, geopolitics, geo-economics
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Druzhinin Alexander
spellingShingle Druzhinin Alexander
The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia
author_facet Druzhinin Alexander
author_sort Druzhinin Alexander
title The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia
title_short The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia
title_full The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia
title_fullStr The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia
title_full_unstemmed The Sea Factor in The Spatial and Socio-Economic Dynamics of Today’s Russia
title_sort sea factor in the spatial and socio-economic dynamics of today’s russia
url https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/quageo.2019.38.issue-2/quageo-2019-0017/quageo-2019-0017.xml?format=INT
geographic Arctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
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genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
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