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ID157400
Title ProperParks and arbitration
Other Title Informationa leader of Russia’s Udege community describes the decades-long fight to create Bikin National Park, the first to safeguard indigenous rights
LanguageENG
AuthorSulyandziga, Pavel
Summary / Abstract (Note)Bikin National Park is one of very few areas in the Russian Far East that remain untouched by those I consider the “wild barbarians of civilization.” It is home to the largest cat on the planet, the Amur tiger, and the Bikin River basin, nicknamed “the Russian Amazon.” Its forests are known as the lungs of the Northern Hemisphere, just as the Amazon’s jungles are in the Southern Hemisphere. The Bikin is also the native land of the Udege people, and about 600 of us still live there. The history of Bikin National Park is inseparable from the history of my people, and over the decades the land has been a valuable lens through which to observe the workings of Russian national politics. After years of struggle, in 2015 Bikin became the first national park project in which the government took responsibility for protecting indigenous rights.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Policy Journal Vol. 34, No.4; Winter 2017: p.6-10
Journal SourceWorld Policy Journal 2017-12 34, 4
Key WordsRussia ;  National Politics ;  Indigenous Rights ;  Bikin National Park ;  Udege Community