The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences

This article explores the spread of the Covid-19 infection in Russia’s Baltic macro-region. The monthly excess mortality rate in the Baltic region is analysed along with regional and municipal Covid-19 response acts to identify regional features affecting the spread of the disease. The spatial chara...

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Published in:Baltic Region
Main Authors: Alov, Ivan N., Pilyasov, Alexandr N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: RUS 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/86627
https://doi.org/10.5922/2079-8555-2023-1-6
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author Alov, Ivan N.
Pilyasov, Alexandr N.
author_facet Alov, Ivan N.
Pilyasov, Alexandr N.
author_sort Alov, Ivan N.
collection SSOAR - Social Science Open Access Repository
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container_title Baltic Region
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description This article explores the spread of the Covid-19 infection in Russia’s Baltic macro-region. The monthly excess mortality rate in the Baltic region is analysed along with regional and municipal Covid-19 response acts to identify regional features affecting the spread of the disease. The spatial characteristics of Russia’s Baltic regions, germane to the propagation of Covid-19, were distinguished by examining selected social and economic statistical indicators. Based on the space of places/space of flows dichotomy, Russia’s Baltic regions can be divided into three spaces: 1) St. Petersburg, the Leningrad and Kaliningrad regions (dominated by spaces of flows; highly permeable space); 2) the Republic of Karelia and the Murmansk region (the key factors are rotational employment and the introduction of the virus from without); 3) the Novgorod and Pskov regions (lowly permeable spaces of places; the central role of local foci of the disease). The principal risk factor for the space of flows is the rapid spread of Covid-19 along transport arteries, whilst, within the space of places, the coronavirus spreads through spatial diffusion from isolated foci along short radii. In the former case, local authorities counteracted spatial diffusion by restricting movement in the local labour market; in the latter, by limiting travel between the centre and the periphery. The traditional ideas about positive (openness, centrality) and negative (closedness, peripherality) characteristics of space are reversed in the context of the pandemic: periphery gains the benefit of natural protection from the pandemic, whilst centres become acutely vulnerable.
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spelling ftssoar:oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/86627 2025-04-27T14:32:11+00:00 The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences Alov, Ivan N. Pilyasov, Alexandr N. 2023-05-12T13:01:30Z https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/86627 https://doi.org/10.5922/2079-8555-2023-1-6 unknown RUS https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/86627 Creative Commons - Namensnennung 4.0 Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0 Baltic Region 15 1 96-119 Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Social sciences sociology anthropology Baltic macro-region horizontal hierarchical spatial diffusion of coronavirus space of flows and space of places monthly excess mortality regional COVID-19 response legislation Gesundheitspolitik Health Policy Russland Baltikum Infektionskrankheit Sterblichkeit Russia Baltic States contagious disease mortality Zeitschriftenartikel journal article 2023 ftssoar https://doi.org/10.5922/2079-8555-2023-1-6 2025-03-31T04:25:58Z This article explores the spread of the Covid-19 infection in Russia’s Baltic macro-region. The monthly excess mortality rate in the Baltic region is analysed along with regional and municipal Covid-19 response acts to identify regional features affecting the spread of the disease. The spatial characteristics of Russia’s Baltic regions, germane to the propagation of Covid-19, were distinguished by examining selected social and economic statistical indicators. Based on the space of places/space of flows dichotomy, Russia’s Baltic regions can be divided into three spaces: 1) St. Petersburg, the Leningrad and Kaliningrad regions (dominated by spaces of flows; highly permeable space); 2) the Republic of Karelia and the Murmansk region (the key factors are rotational employment and the introduction of the virus from without); 3) the Novgorod and Pskov regions (lowly permeable spaces of places; the central role of local foci of the disease). The principal risk factor for the space of flows is the rapid spread of Covid-19 along transport arteries, whilst, within the space of places, the coronavirus spreads through spatial diffusion from isolated foci along short radii. In the former case, local authorities counteracted spatial diffusion by restricting movement in the local labour market; in the latter, by limiting travel between the centre and the periphery. The traditional ideas about positive (openness, centrality) and negative (closedness, peripherality) characteristics of space are reversed in the context of the pandemic: periphery gains the benefit of natural protection from the pandemic, whilst centres become acutely vulnerable. Article in Journal/Newspaper karelia* Republic of Karelia SSOAR - Social Science Open Access Repository Murmansk Russland Baltic Region 15 1 96 119
spellingShingle Sozialwissenschaften
Soziologie
Social sciences
sociology
anthropology
Baltic macro-region
horizontal
hierarchical spatial diffusion of coronavirus
space of flows and space of places
monthly excess mortality
regional COVID-19 response legislation
Gesundheitspolitik
Health Policy
Russland
Baltikum
Infektionskrankheit
Sterblichkeit
Russia
Baltic States
contagious disease
mortality
Alov, Ivan N.
Pilyasov, Alexandr N.
The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences
title The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences
title_full The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences
title_fullStr The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences
title_full_unstemmed The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences
title_short The spread of the COVID-19 infection in Russia's Baltic macro-region: internal differences
title_sort spread of the covid-19 infection in russia's baltic macro-region: internal differences
topic Sozialwissenschaften
Soziologie
Social sciences
sociology
anthropology
Baltic macro-region
horizontal
hierarchical spatial diffusion of coronavirus
space of flows and space of places
monthly excess mortality
regional COVID-19 response legislation
Gesundheitspolitik
Health Policy
Russland
Baltikum
Infektionskrankheit
Sterblichkeit
Russia
Baltic States
contagious disease
mortality
topic_facet Sozialwissenschaften
Soziologie
Social sciences
sociology
anthropology
Baltic macro-region
horizontal
hierarchical spatial diffusion of coronavirus
space of flows and space of places
monthly excess mortality
regional COVID-19 response legislation
Gesundheitspolitik
Health Policy
Russland
Baltikum
Infektionskrankheit
Sterblichkeit
Russia
Baltic States
contagious disease
mortality
url https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/86627
https://doi.org/10.5922/2079-8555-2023-1-6