Journal article

Doomed to Live?

On the Minority Indigenous Populations of Northern Siberia in the Face of the 21st Century

Pages 81 to 84

Cite this article


  • Samson Normand de Chambourg, D.
(2007). Doomed to Live? On the Minority Indigenous Populations of Northern Siberia in the Face of the 21st Century. Multitudes, No 30(3), 81-84. https://doi.org/10.3917/mult.030.0081.

  • Samson Normand de Chambourg, Dominique.
« Doomed to Live? : On the Minority Indigenous Populations of Northern Siberia in the Face of the 21st Century ». Multitudes, 2007/3 No 30, 2007. p.81-84. CAIRN.INFO, shs.cairn.info/journal-multitudes-2007-3-page-81?lang=en.

  • SAMSON NORMAND DE CHAMBOURG, Dominique,
2007. Doomed to Live? On the Minority Indigenous Populations of Northern Siberia in the Face of the 21st Century. Multitudes, 2007/3 No 30, p.81-84. DOI : 10.3917/mult.030.0081. URL : https://shs.cairn.info/journal-multitudes-2007-3-page-81?lang=en.

https://doi.org/10.3917/mult.030.0081


English

As in other parts of the world, the autochthonous territories of the Russian Federation are under the threat of vast industrial projects, like Polar Ural Industrial threatening the Mansis and Man’ Uskve’s ethnographic camp, where the intelligentsia comes, since 1994, to maintain future generations’ language, folklore and ethnography. Between such threats and vapours of alcohol, the Tundra Nenets, the Khantes, the Mansis and the Taiga Nenets are once again condemned to explore their tradition in order to strengthen the roots of the future.

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