Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, Russia

This study examines the institutional setting of the forest sector in the Republic of Karelia, Northwestern Russia. Institutional settings are understood to include formal laws and regulations, as well as informal rules and social constraints that regulate the interaction of the actors in the regio...

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Main Author: Minna Piipponen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 1999-02-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/8943
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spelling doaj-549d812fd8a74ac2b18d6f75d1a24cd82020-11-25T03:12:23ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56171999-02-011772Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, RussiaMinna Piipponen0Karelian Institute, University of Joensuu This study examines the institutional setting of the forest sector in the Republic of Karelia, Northwestern Russia. Institutional settings are understood to include formal laws and regulations, as well as informal rules and social constraints that regulate the interaction of the actors in the regional forest sector. This study scrutinizes the actors’ interactions in relation to the attributes of rules-in-use, community and the forest resources, and outcomes from the interactions according to the Institutional Analysis and Development framework. Within this framework actors’ positions in the restructuring process from the planned economy towards functioning in the market are evaluated. The study explicates that, even if the sectoral restructuring has been going on for years, enterprises and organizations still negotiate about the outcomes of their interactions in favor of options which do not require too expensive investments towards the restructuring of their business practices. In addition, restructuring and reorganization is not just an economic process related to business practices and transactions. It is also entangled with other social and spatial structures and practices. This is most clearly visible in the social responsibilities of the enterprises and in their close connections to local communities. As a result, the current development of the forest sector is divergent. https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/8943
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Minna Piipponen
spellingShingle Minna Piipponen
Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, Russia
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
author_facet Minna Piipponen
author_sort Minna Piipponen
title Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, Russia
title_short Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, Russia
title_full Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, Russia
title_fullStr Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, Russia
title_full_unstemmed Transition in the forest sector of the Republic of Karelia, Russia
title_sort transition in the forest sector of the republic of karelia, russia
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
series Fennia: International Journal of Geography
issn 1798-5617
publishDate 1999-02-01
description This study examines the institutional setting of the forest sector in the Republic of Karelia, Northwestern Russia. Institutional settings are understood to include formal laws and regulations, as well as informal rules and social constraints that regulate the interaction of the actors in the regional forest sector. This study scrutinizes the actors’ interactions in relation to the attributes of rules-in-use, community and the forest resources, and outcomes from the interactions according to the Institutional Analysis and Development framework. Within this framework actors’ positions in the restructuring process from the planned economy towards functioning in the market are evaluated. The study explicates that, even if the sectoral restructuring has been going on for years, enterprises and organizations still negotiate about the outcomes of their interactions in favor of options which do not require too expensive investments towards the restructuring of their business practices. In addition, restructuring and reorganization is not just an economic process related to business practices and transactions. It is also entangled with other social and spatial structures and practices. This is most clearly visible in the social responsibilities of the enterprises and in their close connections to local communities. As a result, the current development of the forest sector is divergent.
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/8943
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