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The Aral Sea is well known for its devastating regression over the second half of the twentieth century, and for its recent partial restoration. Environment and Post-Soviet Transformation in Kazakhstan's Aral Sea Region is the first book to explore what these monumental changes have meant to those living on the sea's shores.
Following the fluctuating fortunes of the pre-Soviet, Soviet and post-Soviet fisheries, the book shows how the vast environmental changes the region has undergone cannot be disentangled from the transformations of Soviet socialism and postsocialism. This ethnographic
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Produktbeschreibung
The Aral Sea is well known for its devastating regression over the second half of the twentieth century, and for its recent partial restoration. Environment and Post-Soviet Transformation in Kazakhstan's Aral Sea Region is the first book to explore what these monumental changes have meant to those living on the sea's shores.
Following the fluctuating fortunes of the pre-Soviet, Soviet and post-Soviet fisheries, the book shows how the vast environmental changes the region has undergone cannot be disentangled from the transformations of Soviet socialism and postsocialism. This ethnographic perspective prompts a critical rethinking of the category of environmental disaster through which the region is predominantly known. Tracing how the sea's retreat and partial return have been apprehended by diverse local actors in the former port of Aral'sk and surrounding fishing villages, as well as by scientists, bureaucrats and international development workers, William Wheeler draws out the multiple meanings environmental change acquires within different contexts. This study of how people make their lives amidst overlapping ecological and political-economic upheavals is rich in ethnographic detail that is both rooted in Soviet legacies and alive to the new transnational connections that are reshaping the region.
Offering a rigorous political ecology of Soviet socialism and after, the book is a major contribution to the nascent environmental anthropology of Central Asia. It will be of interest to environmental anthropologists, environmental historians, and scholars of all disciplines working on Central Asia and the former USSR.

Praise for Environment and Post-Soviet Transformation in Kazakhstan's Aral Sea Region: Sea Changes ' a welcome addition to the existing literature on Central Asia, post-socialism, and the anthropology of the environment'
Journal of Anthropological Research

'a welcome addition to the existing literature on Central Asia, post-socialism, and the anthropology of the environment'
Journal of Anthropological Research

'a godsend...one of the most recent, must-read, and up-to-date analyses of this disaster and its effects... rich with the author's personal experience and encounters with the local people as he takes on an ethnographic journey...'
Erdkunde

'a nuanced, sensitive portrait of local lives based upon extensive fieldwork and research in two languages, Russian and Kazakh...a wonderful contribution to the field of environmental studies and scholarship on Central Asia. As an added bonus, the book has been published in an open access format and can be downloaded for free on the publisher's website.'
Environment and History

'a rich ethnographic account of people's life amidst environmental and political-economic changes'
Water Alternatives

'Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Kazakhstan, Wheeler illuminates the complex situation on the ground in Aral¿sk, Kazakhstan.'
Slavic Review


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Autorenporträt
William Wheeler is Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in Social Anthropology, University of Manchester. He carried out fieldwork in the Aral Sea region of Kazakhstan in 2012-14, completing his PhD at Goldsmiths, University of London, in 2016. His current research project is closer to home, looking at experiences of enforced destitution and encounters with a hostile, disbelieving bureaucracy among those seeking asylum in UK.