Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?

Russia’s waste management system and legislative framework have undergone an ambitious revision process to fix Russia’s pending waste crisis and push waste management towards the levels of its Western neighbours. While the reforms aim to tackle Russia’s insufficient waste management, the local imple...

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Main Authors: Moritz Albrecht, Gleb Yarovoy, Valentina Karginova-Gubinova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2020-12-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/95519
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author Moritz Albrecht
Gleb Yarovoy
Valentina Karginova-Gubinova
author_facet Moritz Albrecht
Gleb Yarovoy
Valentina Karginova-Gubinova
author_sort Moritz Albrecht
collection DOAJ
description Russia’s waste management system and legislative framework have undergone an ambitious revision process to fix Russia’s pending waste crisis and push waste management towards the levels of its Western neighbours. While the reforms aim to tackle Russia’s insufficient waste management, the local implementation realities of these central policy strategies, particularly in rural areas, are largely neglected. Rural communities throughout Russia are to implement a waste policy system which is not only unsuitable in its current form, but wherein local realities are in stark contrast to their representations in the realms of policy design. Obliged to implement nonetheless, these mismatches seem destined in building up a ruin to come of a waste management system that will be dysfunctional and locally contested, particularly in relation to its environmental impact. To scrutinise these developments, the paper is framed by a conceptualisation of policy mobility and translation, with an in-depth focus on localised assembling processes that implement Russian waste legislation in three local communities in the Karelian Republic. It analyses rural waste management in Russia through the Regional Waste Management Programme of the Karelian Republic and their processes of implementation. Based on qualitative analysis, the core focus is on local perceptions, waste management infrastructure and local spatial components that highlight the incompatibility between the current institutionalised planning documents and visions of waste policy in Russia and the geographical realities in the places of materialisation.
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spelling doaj.art-f264118df9f249288007ab5258b8247c2022-12-21T23:08:17ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56172020-12-011981-210.11143/fennia.95519Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?Moritz Albrecht0Gleb Yarovoy1Valentina Karginova-Gubinova2University of Eastern FinlandUniversity of Eastern FinlandKarelian Research Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, PetrozavodskRussia’s waste management system and legislative framework have undergone an ambitious revision process to fix Russia’s pending waste crisis and push waste management towards the levels of its Western neighbours. While the reforms aim to tackle Russia’s insufficient waste management, the local implementation realities of these central policy strategies, particularly in rural areas, are largely neglected. Rural communities throughout Russia are to implement a waste policy system which is not only unsuitable in its current form, but wherein local realities are in stark contrast to their representations in the realms of policy design. Obliged to implement nonetheless, these mismatches seem destined in building up a ruin to come of a waste management system that will be dysfunctional and locally contested, particularly in relation to its environmental impact. To scrutinise these developments, the paper is framed by a conceptualisation of policy mobility and translation, with an in-depth focus on localised assembling processes that implement Russian waste legislation in three local communities in the Karelian Republic. It analyses rural waste management in Russia through the Regional Waste Management Programme of the Karelian Republic and their processes of implementation. Based on qualitative analysis, the core focus is on local perceptions, waste management infrastructure and local spatial components that highlight the incompatibility between the current institutionalised planning documents and visions of waste policy in Russia and the geographical realities in the places of materialisation.https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/95519
spellingShingle Moritz Albrecht
Gleb Yarovoy
Valentina Karginova-Gubinova
Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
title Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?
title_full Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?
title_fullStr Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?
title_full_unstemmed Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?
title_short Russia’s waste policy and rural waste management in the Karelian Republic: building up a ruin to come?
title_sort russia s waste policy and rural waste management in the karelian republic building up a ruin to come
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/95519
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AT valentinakarginovagubinova russiaswastepolicyandruralwastemanagementinthekarelianrepublicbuildinguparuintocome