Tumbling Snow: Vulnerability to Avalanches in the Soviet North
On December 5, 1935, a series of catastrophic avalanches in the Khibiny Mountains in the Soviet Union took eighty-nine lives. The victims included miners for a new industrial enterprise, forced peasant migrants, and the families of workers who had resided in hastily constructed wooden buildings at t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental history 2013-10, Vol.18 (4), p.683-709 |
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description | On December 5, 1935, a series of catastrophic avalanches in the Khibiny Mountains in the Soviet Union took eighty-nine lives. The victims included miners for a new industrial enterprise, forced peasant migrants, and the families of workers who had resided in hastily constructed wooden buildings at the foothill of Mount lukspor. In this article I argue that Stalinist policies of rapid industrialization and settlement of this far northern territory directly heightened human vulnerability to snow avalanches in the years leading up to this tragedy. After the disaster, industrial leaders, scientists, and state planners began to pursue a relatively effective strategy to mitigate mountain-slope hazards. This disaster history offers a new perspective on the environmental history of the Soviet Union and the experience of communist countries in a global context. I show that distinct processes related to Stalinist industrialization generated risk, and actors in an authoritarian state curtailed vulnerability. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1093/envhis/emt064 |
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The victims included miners for a new industrial enterprise, forced peasant migrants, and the families of workers who had resided in hastily constructed wooden buildings at the foothill of Mount lukspor. In this article I argue that Stalinist policies of rapid industrialization and settlement of this far northern territory directly heightened human vulnerability to snow avalanches in the years leading up to this tragedy. After the disaster, industrial leaders, scientists, and state planners began to pursue a relatively effective strategy to mitigate mountain-slope hazards. This disaster history offers a new perspective on the environmental history of the Soviet Union and the experience of communist countries in a global context. 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The victims included miners for a new industrial enterprise, forced peasant migrants, and the families of workers who had resided in hastily constructed wooden buildings at the foothill of Mount lukspor. In this article I argue that Stalinist policies of rapid industrialization and settlement of this far northern territory directly heightened human vulnerability to snow avalanches in the years leading up to this tragedy. After the disaster, industrial leaders, scientists, and state planners began to pursue a relatively effective strategy to mitigate mountain-slope hazards. This disaster history offers a new perspective on the environmental history of the Soviet Union and the experience of communist countries in a global context. 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subjects | Avalanches Disasters Environmental policy Industrial development Russian history |
title | Tumbling Snow: Vulnerability to Avalanches in the Soviet North |
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