ID | 171132 |
Title Proper | They do not help, only demoralize |
Other Title Information | peasant nachalniks and the last imperial Russian reform on the Kazakh Steppe, 1902–1917 |
Language | ENG |
Author | Sultangalieva, Gulmira ; Seitz, John B |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article studies an early-twentieth-century reform in local administration on the Kazakh Steppe. It was catalyzed by the massive in-migration of peasant settlers from European Russia, which required fundamentally new administrative forms and institutional decisions from the state. In 1902 the Russian Empire extended the Temporary Regulation on Peasant Nachalniks, which was previously law only in Siberia, to the steppe oblasts of Akmola, Turgai, Semipalatinsk and Uralsk. In examining discussions surrounding the implementation of the new law, this article uncovers the complexity and ambiguities of the decisions that were made, the problems the new law faced, and the wide array of participants in enacting it. The article also compiles a socio-cultural portrait of the peasant nachalniks and the activities they undertook. Finally, it addresses how the Kazakh population perceived these new officials, and how they interacted with representatives of the Kazakh administration, which was crucial to their effectiveness. |
`In' analytical Note | Central Asian Survey Vol. 39, No.2; Jun 2020: p.167-184 |
Journal Source | Central Asian Survey Vol: 39 No 2 |
Key Words | Kazakh Steppe ; Peasant Nachalniks ; Russian Settlers ; Volost Administration |