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RUSSIAN TURKESTAN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   095551


Contested grounds: ambiguities and disputes over the legal and fiscal status of land in the Manghit Emirate of Bukhara / Schwarz, Florian   Journal Article
Schwarz, Florian Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article explores the legal and fiscal dynamics of land tenure in pre-colonial Islamic Central Asia. It argues that controversies regarding property rights and taxation of Muslims in Russian Turkestan reflect not only colonialist misunderstandings and manipulations of legal concepts and practices of the local Islamic population during the transition to colonial rule. These issues were also rooted in a long history of contested and ambiguous property relations in pre-colonial Central Asia. By looking at documented cases of ambiguity or controversy over the legal and fiscal status of land, it is hoped to shed new light on the dynamic interplay between legal concepts and their application in pre-colonial Central Asia.
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2
ID:   095553


Swamps, sorghum and saxauls: marginal lands and the fate of Russian Turkestan (c.1880-1915) / Penati, Beatrice   Journal Article
Penati, Beatrice Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This article deals with rain-fed tilled land (bahari) and wasteland in Russian Turkestan. On the basis of archival and published sources, the numerous twists and turns of Russian surveying policies before and after the endorsement of the 1886 Turkestan Statute are shown, and problems posed by the specific, mutable nature of bahari land to the mechanism of land-tax allotment within each rural community, in particular for non-resident households are focused on. The 1900 amendments to the Statute radically changed the way land-tax was raised on bahari land: thereafter it was to be calculated on the basis of its surface area instead of as a share of the harvest. Moreover, provisions passed in 1900, but fully implemented only in 1908, extended fiscal liability to wasteland whence villagers could earn an income through grazing, collecting firewood and other activities. It is demonstrated that these measures brought about a significant expansion in fiscal revenues, thus helping to narrow and ultimately redress the deficit in the Turkestan krai's primary budget, which had been a persistent problem since the region was originally annexed in 1865.
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