1st Edition
Soviet Karelia Politics, Planning and Terror in Stalin's Russia, 1920–1939
Introduction 1. ‘A Dark, Backward and Oppressed Periphery’: Histories of Karelian Space 2. ‘A Scandinavian Revolutionary Centre’: Borders, Boundaries and Spatial Ambitions, 1920–1928 3. The Limits of Autonomy: Finance, Planning and Population, 1920–1928 4. ‘A Question of Survival’: Centralisation and Control of Regional Space, 1928–1932 5. ‘The Urals-Kuznetsk Combine on a Smaller Scale’: Visions and Realities of Peripheral Development, 1933–1937 6. ‘The Republican NKVD Has Slaughtered All our Cadres’: Terror on the Periphery, 1935–1939. Conclusion
Biography
Nick Baron teaches twentieth century Russian and East European history and historical geography at the University of Nottingham, UK. He is the author of The King of Karelia. Col P.J. Woods and the British Intervention in North Russia, 1918-1919 (2007) and co-editor of Homelands. War, Population and Statehood in Eastern Europe and Russia, 1918-1924 (2004) and Sovetskaia Lesnaia Ekonomika. Moskva-Sever. 1917-1941 (2005). He is currently working on a cultural history of Soviet cartography.
'...a major contribution to the burgeoning scholarly literature on 'centre-periphery' relations...majestic in detailing the tortuous paths to this Stalinist outcome... a significant contribution to the history of interwar Soviet Russia. It deserves to be widely read.'- Kevin McDermott, Sheffield Hallam University; Revolutionary Russia, 21:1 (2008), 101-03






