A. Lavrillier, Semen Gabyshev, L. Egorova, G. Makarova, Maia Lomovtseva-Adukanova
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Siberian indigenous villagers and nomads have often struggled to find enough income to sustain themselves. Some natives think that ethno-tourism can be a source of income, but there is currently little tourism in Siberia. In the circumpolar Arctic, tourism is presented as a source of economic development. The Russian Federation’s Official Plan for Economic Development to 2030 also includes the growth of tourism; to this end, Russia has mobilised specialised taskforces. What will be the economic, social and cultural consequences for native communities? What forms of tourism will be beneficial for them? What perceptions do Siberian natives have of tourism? This transdisciplinary paper compares non-existent tourism, as it is imagined, desired, or deplored by native townspeople, villagers, and nomadic herders of the Sakha-Yakutia Republic and Amur region, with existing ethno-tourism experiences in Kamchatka. Based on ethnographic material collected from 1994 to 2016, the paper used participatory fieldwork, hypothesising performed by indigenous co-researchers and an anthropologist, and classical anthropology. It analyses existing and non-existent tourisms on the economic, social, cultural, and administrative levels.
期刊介绍:
Créée en 1983 par l’Université de Lille 1, siège de sa publication, espace populations sociétés est une revue pluridisciplinaire, internationale et thématique. Elle est ouverte et destinée aux scientifiques dont les thèmes de recherche recouvrent les trois mots-clés qui composent le titre. La différenciation démographique et la différenciation sociale des configurations, de la pratique ou du vécu de l’espace, la différenciation spatiale des populations, des sociétés ou des groupes sociaux, l’imbrication des phénomènes sociaux, démographiques et spatiaux et leurs interactions constituent des objets d’études pour des géographes.