World Regional Geography

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

World Regional Geography RUSSIA World Regional Geography David Sallee Lesson 3 MAJOR GEOGRAPHIC RUSSIA’S DIMENSIONS QUALITIES z IMMENSE TERRITORIAL STATE z SPANS 11 TIME ZONES z NORTHERNMOST LARGE AND POPULOUS z GULF OF FINLAND TO ALASKA COUNTRY IN THE WORLD (WEST TO EAST), AND WELL z A FORMER WORLD COLONIAL POWER ABOVE THE ARCTIC CIRCLE TO SALT LAKE CITY (NORTH TO z A COMPARITIVELY SMALL (<150 MILLION) AND CONCENTRATED POPULATION SOUTH) z TWICE THE SIZE OF THE US OR z CONCENTRATED DEVELOPMENT TWICE THE SIZE OF THE US OR CHINA z MULTICULTURAL STATE z SIBERIA: “SLEEPING LAND” z MINIMAL PORTS SIZE, LOCATION AND SPACE RELATIONSHIPS z LATITUDINAL EXTENT – Northernmost point: Rudolf Island in Franz Joseph Land (82o) – Southernmost point: Grozny in west and Vladivostok in east (44o) z LONGITUDINAL EXTENT – More than twice its maximum north-south extent and extends through 11 time zones z Russia makes up 76.6% of the total territory of the former USSR (17,075,400 km--almost twice the size of the US). RUSSIA-US SIZE COMPARISON 1 80º GROWTH OF THE 60º RUSSIAN EMPIRE 40º 20º FORWARD CAPITAL GROWTH OF THE RUSSIAN EMPIRE Capital city positioned in actually or potentially contested territory, usually near an international border, confirms the state’s determination to maintain its presence in the region 80o Arctic Circle CLIMATOLOGY Alaska z CLIMATE 60o – AVERAGE WEATHER CONDITIONS FOR A GIVEN AREA OVER AN EXTENDED PERIOD OF TIME z WEATHER – REFERS TO THE ATMOSPHERIC CONDITIONS AT A SPECIFIC PLACE AND TIME z CLIMATOLOGY 40o – A BRANCH OF PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY – CONCERNED WITH: z SPATIAL ARRANGEMENT OF CLIMATE OVER THE Hawaii SURFACE OF THE EARH z PROCESSES WHICH CONTRIBUTE TO THE DISTRIBUTION LOCATIONAL IMPACT ON RUSSIA’S CLIMATE 2 CLIMATE RUSSIAN CLIMATE z Affected by 3 natural conditions: -- Latitudinal Position -- Continental Position -- Location of major mountains VEGETATION CLIMATE AS A RESTRICTIVE ELEMENT z AGRICULTURE – Short growing seasons – Drought prone – Erosion (accelerated via snow melt) z SETTLEMENT PATTERNS & TRANSPORTATION z INDUSTRY – High energy consumption – Specialized equipment and facilities – Extractive z permafrost z spring and fall mud z special equipment and facilities - $$$ AGRICULTURAL PATTERNS SETTLEMENT / TRANSPORTATION PATTERNS 3 PHYSIOGRAPHIC REGIONS z RUSSIAN PLAIN – EASTWARD CONTINUATION OF NORTH EUROPEAN LOWLAND – CORE AREA (MOSCOW BASIN) z URAL MOUNTAINS – 2,000 MILES LONG (NORTH-SOUTH) – YIELD A VARIETY OF MINERALS z WEST SIBERIAN PLAIN – WORLD’S LARGEST UNBROKEN LOWLANDS – PERMAFROST RUSSIA’S PHYSIOGRAPHIC REGIONS PHYSIOGRAPHIC REGIONS RUSSIAN z CENTRAL SIBERIAN PLATEAU PLAIN – SPARSELY POPULATED, TEMPERATURE EXTREMES, PERMAFROST z YAKUTSK BASIN – MOUNTAINOUS, HIGH RELIEF z EASTERN HIGHLANDS – RANGES, RIDGES, PRECIPITOUS VALLEYS, VOLCANIC MOUNTAINS, LAKE BAYKAL z CENTRAL ASIAN RANGES – RISE ABOVE THE SNOW LINE, GLACIATED z CAUCASUS MOUNTAINS – EXTENSIONS OF THE ALPINES THE URAL MOUNTAINS WEST SIBERIAN PLAIN •The north-south length covers 2500 kms. •The highest points are in the Northern Urals-2000 meters in places. •The world’s largest •The Central Urals are the lowest unbroken lowland section and include several key crossing places. •Includes the Ob and •The Southern Urals are wider and Irtysh River Basin consist of a number of parallel north- •Permafrost south ridges and intervening valleys. •Ural forests and minerals have been •Major Cities: the basis for industrialization and •Omsk boast at least twenty different •Novosibirsk commercially usable minerals. 4 CENTRAL SIBERIAN EASTERN HIGHLANDS PLATEAU •Sparsely settled •Inaccessible •Restrictive climate •Permafrost •Natural resources CAUCASUS MOUNTAINS CENTRAL ASIAN RANGES POLITICAL FRAMEWORK z SOVIET LEGACY – Revolution (1905-1917) – Bolsheviks versus Mensheviks – V.I. Lenin (Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov) – Capital: Petrograd to Moscow (1918) z FEDERATION/FEDERAL STRUCTURE – USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) -1924 – SSRs, ASSRs, Autonomous Regions z RUSSIFICATION SOVIET UNION 5 COMMAND ECONOMY ECONOMIC FRAMEWORK z An economy in which the means of z CENTRALLY PLANNED (early production are owned and controlled 1920s) by the state and in which central – MAJOR OBJECTIVES planning of the structure and the – MAJOR OBJECTIVES output prevails z Speed industrialization z Features of the Soviet economy z Collectivize – Production of particular manufactured goods to particular places agriculture – Economic interdependence of the republics SOVIET LEADERS SOVIET LEADERS Lenin (1918 - 1927) z Introduced Marxist z Czarism philosophy (<1917) z Replaced private with z Lenin public ownership z Stalin z Developed national z Kruschev economic plans z Breshnev Breshnev z Established Soviet z Gorbachev political structure based on ethnic identities SOVIET LEADERS SOVIET LEADERS Stalin (1927 - 1953) Kruschev (1953 - 1964) z All assets nationalized z Greater emphasis on agriculture z Virgin Lands Program - pastures into z Creation of huge centralized Virgin Lands Program - pastures into state machine over all irrigated wheat fields aspects of Soviet life z Ultimately led to Aral Sea environmental disaster z Purges of dissidents (30-60 million) Breshnev (1964 - 1982) z Collectivized farming z Height of the Cold War (sovkhoz) z Military/industrial economy z Concentration on heavy z Economic stagnation (agriculture) industry at expense of agriculture 6 COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION SOVIET LEADERS (Conditions in 1990 & 1991) Gorbachev (1985 - 1991) z A sharp decline in agricultural & z Initiated economic and political reform industrial production z PERESTROIKA – Economic output down by 4% in 1990 & – Restructuring 10-15% in first half of 1991 – Intended to produce major changes to both the economic and political system z Intensification of ethno-cultural – Economic aim: to catch up with western nationalism & separatism economies nationalism & separatism – Political aim: reform of the Communist – Unity of the Soviet Union (macro) & unity Party of republics (micro) threatened z GLASNOST – Policy of encouraging greater openness in z Pluralization of Soviet politics & steady both internal and external affairs erosion of Communist Party monopoly or power COLLAPSE OF THE SOVIET UNION (Conditions in 1990 & 1991) CURRENT ORGANIZATION z The emergence of a z RUSSIAN FEDERATION (1992) “commonwealth” of Slavic countries to z 89 POLITICAL UNITS replace the Soviet – 21 REPUBLICS Union – 11 AUTONOMOUS REGIONS (OKRUGS) z Commonwealth of (OKRUGS) Independent States – 49 PROVINCES (OBLASTS) – 6 TERRITORIES (KRAYS) z The resignation of – 2 AUTONOMOUS FEDERAL CITIES President Gorbachev RUSSIA’S ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISIONS 7.
Recommended publications
  • Energy, Wealth and Governance in the Caucasus and Central Asia
    Energy, Wealth and Governance in the Caucasus and Central Asia In 1991 the eight countries of the Caucasus and Central Asia (CCA) became independent from the former Soviet Union. Although a region rich in natural resources, the transition toward a market economy has not gone smoothly for the CCA countries. Drawing upon recent progress in development economics and political science, the book provides fresh analysis of the CCA countries’ transition by tracing the impact of the natural resource endowment. The book examines the synergies between energy-rich and energy-poor states and highlights the practical consequences of both well-managed and poorly-managed energy revenue deployment. The region has been a relatively slow reformer, its governments have become more authoritarian, and the contributors argue that despite recent growth spurts, further reform is required to sustain rapid GDP growth and nurture democracy. They suggest that unless CCA elites change the way in which they deploy natural resource revenues, regional development will fall short of its potential with possibly disastrous consequences. The contributors apply the experience of the developing market economies to demonstrate that the region still holds considerable potential to become an important stable supplier of raw materials and a source of industrial demand to the global economy. However, the CCA could become a threat to the global economy as a consequence of the misuse of energy revenues in promoting the interests of predatory political elites. With contributions from prominent specialists on resource-driven econ- omies Energy, Wealth and Governance in the Caucasus and Central Asia pro- vides a systematic and integrated analysis of the political economy of resource-driven growth in the CCA region.
    [Show full text]
  • Cost Effective Water Protection in the Gulf of Finland
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE The Finnish Environmentprovided by Helsingin yliopiston632 digitaalinen arkisto ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION Mikko Kiirikki, Pirjo Rantanen, Riku Varjopuro, Anne Leppänen, Marjukka Hiltunen, Heikki Pitkänen, Petri Ekholm, Elvira Moukhametshina, Arto Inkala, Harri Kuosa and Juha Sarkkula Cost effective water protection in the Gulf of Finland Focus on St. Petersburg . .......................... FINNISH ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTE The Finnish Environment 632 Mikko Kiirikki, Pirjo Rantanen, Riku Varjopuro, Anne Leppänen, Marjukka Hiltunen, Heikki Pitkänen, Petri Ekholm, Elvira Moukhametshina, Arto Inkala, Harri Kuosa and Juha Sarkkula Cost effective water protection in the Gulf of Finland Focus on St. Petersburg HELSINKI 2003 . .......................... FINNISH ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTE The publication is also available in the Internet www.environment.fi/publications ISBN 952-11-1426-6 ISBN 952-11-1427-4 (PDF) ISSN 1238-7312 Cover photo: Karri Eloheimo/ Water sampling in the Central Waste Water Treatment Plant in St. Petersburg. Graphics: Paula Väänänen & Mikko Kiirikki Layout: Ritva Koskinen Printing: Dark Ltd Helsinki 2003 2 ..........................................................The Finnish Environment 632 Contents Summary ..........................................................................................5 1 Introduction ..................................................................................7 2 Nutrient load ..............................................................................10
    [Show full text]
  • From Small Scales to Large Scales –The Gulf of Finland Science Days
    Gulf of Finland Co-operation From small scales to large scales –The Gulf of Finland Science Days 2017 9th-10th October 2017 Estonian Academy of Sciences, Tallinn Photo: Riku Lumiaro Photo: Gulf of Finland Contents Co-operation ORAL PRESENTATIONS V. Andreeva, E. Voyakina* Phytoplankton structure in eastern part of Gulf of Finland A. Antsulevich*, S. Titov Development of the program for combined restoration of European pearl mussel (Margaritifera margaritifera) and salmonid fishes local populations in two rivers inflowing to the Gulf of Finland in nature protected areas of Leningrad Oblast. R. Aps*, M. Fetissov, F. Goerlandt, P. Kujala, A. Piel, J. Thomas Systems approach based maritime traffic safety management in the Gulf of Finland (Baltic Sea) J. Kotta*, R. Aps, M. Futter, K. Herkül Assessing the environmental impacts and nutrient removal potential of mussel farms in the northeastern Baltic Sea J. Björkqvist*, O. Vähä-Piikkiö, L. Tuomi, V. Alari A spatially extensive validation of three different wave models in the Helsinki coastal archipelago A. Ivanchenko, D. Burkov* The state and environmental consequences of pollution air pool of the Gulf of Finland transport emissions K. Rubtsova, T. Mironenko, E. Daev* Preliminary assessment of water and sediment pollutions in littoral zone of the Kotlin Island. P. Ekholm*, M. Ollikainen, E. Punttila, S. Puroila, A. Kosenius Reducing agricultural phosphorus load by gypsum: results from the first year after amendment M. Fetissov*, R. Aps, P. Heinla, J. Kinnunen, O. Korneev, L. Lees, R. Varjopuro Ecosystem-based Maritime Spatial Planning – impact on navigational safety from offshore renewable energy developments V. Fleming-Lehtinen*, H. Parner, J.
    [Show full text]
  • Eastern Gulf of Finland-1
    Template for Submission of Information, including Traditional Knowledge, to Describe Areas Meeting Scientific Criteria for Ecologically or Biologically Significant Marine Areas EASTERN GULF OF FINLAND Abstract The area is a shallow (mean 24 m, max 95 m deep) archipelago area in the northeastern Baltic Sea. It is characterized by hundreds of small islands and skerries, coastal lagoons and boreal narrow inlets, as well as a specific geomorphology, with clear signs from the last glaciation. Due to the low salinity (0- 5 permille), the species composition is a mixture of freshwater and marine organisms, and especially diversity of aquatic plants is high, Many marine species, including habitat forming key species such as bladderwrack (Fucus vesiculosus) and blue mussel (Mytilus trossulus), live on the edge of their geographical distribution limits, which makes them vulnerable to human disturbance and effects of climate change. The area has a rich birdlife and supports one of the most important populations of the ringed seal (Pusa hispida botnica), an endangered species. Introduction to the area The proposed area (Fig. 1 & 2) is situated on the north-eastern part of the Gulf of Finland, in the Baltic Sea, which is the largest brackish water area in the World. The proposed area is an archipelago with hundreds of small islands and skerries, coastal lagoons and boreal narrow inlets, as well as a specific geomorphology, with clear signs from the last glaciation (ca. 18.000 – 9.000 BP). Coastal areas freeze over still freeze over every winter for at least a few weeks. The scenery in the area ranges from sheltered inner archipelago with lagoons, shallow bays and boreal inlets, through middle archipelago, with few larger islands, to wave exposed outer archipelago with open sea, small islands and skerries.
    [Show full text]
  • 2007 Arctic Energy Summit Final Report
    FINAL REPORT AND TECHNICAL PROCEEDINGS AES Final Report & Technical Proceedings | Executive Summary 1 Arctic council • u.S. DEpArtmEnt of StAtE • inStitutE of tHE nortH The Arctic Energy Summit: The Arctic as an Emerging Energy Province international polar Year project #299 prepared by: James r. Hemsath pE, pmp Senior fellow the institute of the north Anchorage, Alaska february 2010 conference photos by clark James mishler contents 3 IPY LETTER 5 FoREwoRd 6 CHAPTER 1: Executive Summary An introduction to the international polar Year the Arctic as an Energy province the Arctic Energy Summit recommendations from the Summit organization of this report conclusions 14 CHAPTER 2: Arctic Energy Summit Technology Conference plenary Sessions panel Sessions policy Human resources rural Energy in the Arctic Shipping and transportation options Environmental concerns infrastructure and the impact of climate change impacts of Energy Development on the people of the north Energy Security Arctic Energy technology conference themes rural and renewable Energy in the Arctic Extractive Energy in the Arctic Sustainability of Energy in the Arctic presentations and papers 30 CHAPTER 3: The Arctic Energy Action Team results and recommendations Extractive Energy: the Development of Arctic coal renewable Energy: the Development of tidal Generation rural Energy: the Development of Alternative transportation fuels 34 CHAPTER 4: The Arctic Energy Education and outreach Program the Arctic Energy Summit Website the Arctic Synergy Education and Youth 36 APPENdICES:
    [Show full text]
  • 20020011.Pdf
    Color profile: Generic CMYK printer profile Composite Default screen 1144 PERSPECTIVE Geological and evolutionary underpinnings for the success of Ponto-Caspian species invasions in the Baltic Sea and North American Great Lakes David F. Reid and Marina I. Orlova1 Abstract: Between 1985 and 2000, ~70% of new species that invaded the North American Great Lakes were endemic to the Ponto-Caspian (Caspian, Azov, and Black seas) basins of eastern Europe. Sixteen Ponto-Caspian species were also established in the Baltic Sea as of 2000. Many Ponto-Caspian endemic species are characterized by wide environmental tolerances and high phenotypic variability. Ponto-Caspian fauna evolved over millions of years in a series of large lakes and seas with widely varying salinities and water levels and alternating periods of isolation and open connections between the Caspian Sea and Black Sea depressions and between these basins and the Mediterranean Basin and the World Ocean. These conditions probably resulted in selection of Ponto-Caspian endemic species for the broad environmental tolerances and euryhalinity many exhibit. Both the Baltic Sea and the Great Lakes are geologi- cally young and present much lower levels of endemism. The high tolerance of Ponto-Caspian fauna to varying environmental conditions, their ability to survive exposure to a range of salinities, and the similarity in environmental conditions available in the Baltic Sea and Great Lakes probably contribute to the invasion success of these species. Human activities have dramatically increased the opportunities for transport and introduction and have played a cata- lytic role. Résumé : Entre 1985 et 2000, environ 70 % des espèces qui ont envahi pour la première fois les Grands-Lacs d’Amérique du Nord étaient endémiques aux bassins versants de la région pontocaspienne de l’Europe de l’Est, soit ceux de la mer Caspienne, de la mer d’Azov et de la mer Noire.
    [Show full text]
  • Establishment of the Ponto-Caspian Predatory Cladoceran Evadne Anonyx in the Eastern Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea
    Aquatic Invasions (2006) 1: 7-12 © 2006 European Research Network on Aquatic Invasive Species Establishment of the Ponto-Caspian predatory cladoceran Evadne anonyx in the eastern Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea Natalie V. Rodionova and Vadim E. Panov* Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia, *Corresponding author, E-mail: [email protected] Received 11 October 2005; accepted in revised form 24 January 2006 Key words: onychopods, invasive crustaceans, establishment, Evadne anonyx, Baltic Sea, invasion, nonindigenous Abstract The Ponto–Caspian predatory cladoceran Evadne anonyx G.O. Sars, 1897 was first recorded in the eastern Gulf of Finland in the zooplankton samples collected during summer 2000. Most likely, E. anonyx invaded the gulf in the late 1990s from the Caspian Sea via the Volga–Baltic waterway through the transport of ballast water of ships. Between 2000 and 2004, the population densities of E. anonyx increased in the eastern Gulf of Finland more than 10-fold, indicating successful establishment of the new Ponto-Caspian invader in the Baltic Sea. Caspian onychopods, Evadne anonyx G.O. Sars, Introduction 1897 (Crustacea: Cladocera: Onychopoda), a common zooplankton species from the Caspian Sea. The Ponto–Caspian basin is one of the principal donor regions of alien species for the Baltic Sea Methods area. It is currently connected to the Baltic Sea basin by a complicated hydrographic network, Zooplankton samples were collected in the where the Volga–Baltic waterway represents the eastern Gulf of Finland every 10–14 days in main invasion corridor (Panov et al. 1999). The June–October over nine years (1996–2004) at Gulf of Finland is the terminal upper link of this two stations: at a deepwater (25 m) station in the corridor, and can be considered as one of the region of the Primorsk oil terminal (station P1 most vulnerable areas in the Baltic to the with geographic coordinates 60°20’ N, 28°44’ E), invasions of alien species.
    [Show full text]
  • Environmental Degradation of Russian Coastal Regions: the Case of the Gulf of Finland
    Trumbull.fm Page 1 Friday, September 11, 2009 10:01 AM Environmental Degradation of Russian Coastal Regions: The Case of the Gulf of Finland Nathaniel Trumbull and Oleg Bodrov1 Abstract: An American geographer and Russian ecologist discuss current and prospective environmental hazards precipitated by large-scale infrastructure projects on Russia’s southern coast of the Gulf of Finland. The region, investigated by both authors during the course of regular field research from 1999 to 2009, is one of the best environmentally preserved coast- lines of the Baltic Sea with abundant potential greenfield sites, largely due to its closed-bor- der-zone status during the Soviet period. A favorable location for trade also places the region under intense development pressure. The authors devote particular attention to two major developments, a multifunctional port complex (which inter alia serves as a major pipeline ter- minus and oil export port) and expansion of an existing nuclear power plant. Based on exten- sive personal observations and government documents, they analyze the emerging environmental threat posed by these initiatives as well as the challenging political environ- ment that discourages public participation and local involvement in spatial planning. Journal of Economic Literature, Classification Numbers: O180, O290, Q280, Q530. 7 figures, 35 ref- erences. Key words: Gulf of Finland, Russia, St. Petersburg, Primorsk, Ust’-Luga port, Lenin- grad Nuclear Power Plant, Batareynaya Bay, Baltic Transportation System, oil export ports, gas pipeline terminus, aluminum production, polycrystalline silicon, nuclear waste, nature reserves, wetlands. INTRODUCTION n May 2008, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin paid a helicopter visit to the site of the Ust’- ILuga port complex, currently under construction on the southern coast of the Gulf of Finland (e.g., see Kommersant, May 15, 2008, p.
    [Show full text]
  • Baltic Sea Ice Seasons in the Twentieth Century
    CLIMATE RESEARCH Vol. 25: 217–227, 2004 Published January 23 Clim Res Baltic Sea ice seasons in the twentieth century S. Jevrejeva1,*, V. V. Drabkin2, J. Kostjukov3, A. A. Lebedev2, M. Leppäranta4, Ye. U. Mironov2, N. Schmelzer 5, M. Sztobryn6 1Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory, Bidston Observatory, Birkenhead CH43 7RA, UK 2Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, 38 Bering Str., St. Petersburg 199397, Russia 3Latvian Hydrometeorological Agency, 165 Maskavas Str., Riga, Latvia 4University of Helsinki, Division of Geophysics, PO Box 64, 00014 Helsinki, Finland 5 Bundesamt für Seeschifffahrt und Hydrographie, Neptunallee 5, 18057 Rostock, Germany 6 Institute of Meteorology and Water Management, Waszyngtona 42, Gdynia, Poland ABSTRACT: We examine the evolution of ice seasons in the Baltic Sea during the 20th century based on a set of 37 time series from the coastal observation stations. The statistical question of combining data from sites with different ice probabilities is solved by using fractiles of the distributions. These 100 yr long time series, including date of freezing, ice break-up, number of days with ice, and maxi- mum annual ice thickness, provide evidence of a general trend toward easier ice conditions; the largest change is in the length of ice season, which is decreasing by 14 to 44 d per century. The trends of a reduction of about 8 to 20 d per century to earliest ice break-up are in a good agreement with a warming trend in winter air temperature over Europe. A statistically significant decreasing trend in probability of ice occurrence in the southern part of the Baltic Sea was detected; however, there is no change in probability of ice occurrence in the northern part.
    [Show full text]
  • Russia.Pdf 71 Chicago Tribune
    Table of Contents PROFILE 5 INTRODUCTION 5 FACTS AND FIGURES 6 GEOGRAPHY 15 INTRODUCTION 15 GEOGRAPHIC REGIONS AND TOPOGRAPHIC FEATURES 15 KOLA PENINSULA 15 RUSSIAN PLAIN 15 CAUCASUS MOUNTAINS 16 URAL MOUNTAINS 16 WEST SIBERIAN PLAIN 17 CENTRAL SIBERIAN PLATEAU 17 TAYMYR PENINSULA 17 MOUNTAINS OF THE SOUTH AND EAST 18 CLIMATE 19 RIVERS AND LAKES 20 CASPIAN SEA/BLACK SEA 20 ARCTIC OCEAN 21 PACIFIC OCEAN 22 MAJOR CITIES 23 MOSCOW 24 SAINT PETERSBURG 25 NOVOSIBIRSK 26 NIZHNIY NOVGOROD 27 YEKATERINBURG 28 ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS 29 WATER POLLUTION 29 NUCLEAR ENVIRONMENTAL THREATS 29 NATURAL HAZARDS 30 HISTORY 32 EARLY HISTORY 32 ORIGIN OF THE RUSSIAN STATE 32 KIEVAN RUS 33 THE MONGOL INVASION 34 THE GOLDEN HORDE 34 THE RISE OF MUSCOVY (MOSCOW) 35 IVAN IV (THE TERRIBLE) 36 BORIS GODUNOV AND THE TIME OF TROUBLES 37 THE ROMANOVS 38 PETER I (THE GREAT) 38 THE ERA OF PALACE REVOLUTIONS 39 2 CATHERINE II 40 THE EARLY 19TH CENTURY 41 REFORM EFFORTS 41 ALEXANDER III 42 REVOLUTIONS AND CIVIL WAR 43 PROLOGUE TO REVOLUTION 43 WORLD WAR I AND THE FEBRUARY REVOLUTION 44 THE OCTOBER REVOLUTION 45 THE SOVIET ERA 46 THE ASCENT OF STALIN 46 STALIN’S PURGES 47 WORLD WAR II 47 POST WORLD WAR II 48 KHRUSHCHEV AND THE POST-STALIN THAW 49 BREZHNEV, ANDROPOV, AND CHERNENKO 50 PERESTROIKA AND GLASNOST 50 THE LAST YEARS OF THE SOVIET UNION 51 END GAME 52 POST-SOVIET RUSSIA 53 ECONOMIC TROUBLES 53 CHECHNYA 53 PUTIN AND MEDVEDEV 54 ECONOMY 56 INTRODUCTION 56 INDUSTRY AND MANUFACTURING 56 AGRICULTURE 57 BANKING AND CURRENCY 58 TRADE 59 INVESTMENT 61 ENERGY AND MINERAL
    [Show full text]
  • Energy Empire: Oil, Gas and Russia's Revival
    The European Think Tank with a Global Outlook Energy Empire: Oil, Gas and Russia’s Revival Fiona Hill September 2004 About the Author First published in 2004 by The Foreign Policy Centre Dr. Fiona Hill is a Senior Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies 49 Chalton Street Program at The Brookings Institution. She has published extensively London on a diverse range of issues related to Russia, relations among the NW1 1HY states of the former Soviet Union, the Caucasus region, Central UNITED KINGDOM Asia, ethno-political conflicts in Eurasia, and energy and strategic issues. Her book with Brookings Senior Fellow Clifford Gaddy, The Email: [email protected] Siberian Curse. How Communist Planners Left Russia Out in the Cold, was published by Brookings Press in December 2003. Other ©The Foreign Policy Centre 2004 recent publications include: ‘The Caspian Region: Pipelines for Politics, Peace and Prosperity?’ Georgetown Journal of International Affairs (Winter/Spring, 2004); ‘Central Asia and the Caucasus: The All rights reserved Impact of the War on Terrorism’, Nations in Transit (Freedom ISBN: 1 903558 38 7 House, 2003); ‘Seismic Shifts in Eurasia: The Changing Relationship Between Turkey and Russia, And its Implications for the South Caucasus’, Journal of South Eastern European and Black Sea Studies (2003); ‘Does Saudi Arabia Still Matter? Differing Perspectives on the Kingdom and its Oil’, (with Shibley Telhami) in Foreign Affairs, November/December 2002; and ‘Fueling the Future: The Prospects for Russian Oil and Gas’, (with Florence Fee) in Demokratizatsiya, Fall 2002. Hill was Director of Strategic Planning at the Eurasia Foundation in Washington, DC, from 1999-2000, and continues to serve as an advisor to the Foundation’s president.
    [Show full text]
  • Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index
    CAFF Assessment Series Report September 2015 Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index ARCTIC COUNCIL Acknowledgements CAFF Designated Agencies: • Norwegian Environment Agency, Trondheim, Norway • Environment Canada, Ottawa, Canada • Faroese Museum of Natural History, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands (Kingdom of Denmark) • Finnish Ministry of the Environment, Helsinki, Finland • Icelandic Institute of Natural History, Reykjavik, Iceland • Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Greenland • Russian Federation Ministry of Natural Resources, Moscow, Russia • Swedish Environmental Protection Agency, Stockholm, Sweden • United States Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service, Anchorage, Alaska CAFF Permanent Participant Organizations: • Aleut International Association (AIA) • Arctic Athabaskan Council (AAC) • Gwich’in Council International (GCI) • Inuit Circumpolar Council (ICC) • Russian Indigenous Peoples of the North (RAIPON) • Saami Council This publication should be cited as: Deinet, S., Zöckler, C., Jacoby, D., Tresize, E., Marconi, V., McRae, L., Svobods, M., & Barry, T. (2015). The Arctic Species Trend Index: Migratory Birds Index. Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna, Akureyri, Iceland. ISBN: 978-9935-431-44-8 Cover photo: Arctic tern. Photo: Mark Medcalf/Shutterstock.com Back cover: Red knot. Photo: USFWS/Flickr Design and layout: Courtney Price For more information please contact: CAFF International Secretariat Borgir, Nordurslod 600 Akureyri, Iceland Phone: +354 462-3350 Fax: +354 462-3390 Email: [email protected] Internet: www.caff.is This report was commissioned and funded by the Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF), the Biodiversity Working Group of the Arctic Council. Additional funding was provided by WWF International, the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS). The views expressed in this report are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Arctic Council or its members.
    [Show full text]