Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques

The Russian Arctic accounts for about 40% of the world’s Arctic population and indigenous peoples now account for only 5% of its total population. Russia is the most advanced in terms of urbanization of the whole Arctic. The settlement process has been marked by Soviet history and its paradoxes but...

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Main Author: Sophie Hohmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille 2021-01-01
Series:Espace populations sociétés
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/eps/10402
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spelling doaj-abdfe453d26043bd9355f8d71ffd72de2021-04-08T17:18:55ZengUniversité des Sciences et Technologies de LilleEspace populations sociétés0755-78092104-37522021-01-01202010.4000/eps.10402Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiquesSophie HohmannThe Russian Arctic accounts for about 40% of the world’s Arctic population and indigenous peoples now account for only 5% of its total population. Russia is the most advanced in terms of urbanization of the whole Arctic. The settlement process has been marked by Soviet history and its paradoxes but they are also transformed into a transnational logic. This complex story of the construction of the most populated cities of the Arctic invites to decipher the urban identities, by investigating history of mobilities and urbanity’s construction with populations coming from different regions and formely Soviet republics, including Central Asia and the Southern Caucasus.This paper analyzes the link between recent mobility and that experienced during the Soviet era is shaped and embedded into reticular ties and how these new mobilities participate in the construction of multicultural identities. It shows how these economic migrants, mostly from former Soviet Muslim countries, will take advantage of the end of Sovietism and of de-secularization to reshape their religious identity around the community in a region which until now had not experienced this meeting.http://journals.openedition.org/eps/10402Russian arctic citiesmobilitiesmigrationsmigrant trajectoriesidentitiesislam
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie Hohmann
spellingShingle Sophie Hohmann
Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques
Espace populations sociétés
Russian arctic cities
mobilities
migrations
migrant trajectories
identities
islam
author_facet Sophie Hohmann
author_sort Sophie Hohmann
title Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques
title_short Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques
title_full Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques
title_fullStr Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques
title_full_unstemmed Des Suds vers le Grand Nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques
title_sort des suds vers le grand nord : recomposition des mobilités et des identités urbaines post-soviétiques
publisher Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille
series Espace populations sociétés
issn 0755-7809
2104-3752
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The Russian Arctic accounts for about 40% of the world’s Arctic population and indigenous peoples now account for only 5% of its total population. Russia is the most advanced in terms of urbanization of the whole Arctic. The settlement process has been marked by Soviet history and its paradoxes but they are also transformed into a transnational logic. This complex story of the construction of the most populated cities of the Arctic invites to decipher the urban identities, by investigating history of mobilities and urbanity’s construction with populations coming from different regions and formely Soviet republics, including Central Asia and the Southern Caucasus.This paper analyzes the link between recent mobility and that experienced during the Soviet era is shaped and embedded into reticular ties and how these new mobilities participate in the construction of multicultural identities. It shows how these economic migrants, mostly from former Soviet Muslim countries, will take advantage of the end of Sovietism and of de-secularization to reshape their religious identity around the community in a region which until now had not experienced this meeting.
topic Russian arctic cities
mobilities
migrations
migrant trajectories
identities
islam
url http://journals.openedition.org/eps/10402
work_keys_str_mv AT sophiehohmann dessudsverslegrandnordrecompositiondesmobilitesetdesidentitesurbainespostsovietiques
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