Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T13:30:25.647Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nonterritorial Autonomy in Northern Eurasia: Rooted or Alien?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 September 2021

Alexander Osipov*
Affiliation:
International Centre for Ethnic and Linguistic Diversity Studies, Czech Republic / Germany
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The article examines the ideas and arrangements referred to as nonterritorial autonomy (NTA) in the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union, and the post-Soviet states. Many scholars regard NTA as a theoretical breakthrough and as a way to drastically rearrange diversity policies. The author seeks to clarify whether NTA had been a groundbreaking innovation and an area of political contestations. Two short periods of NTA-related initiatives after 1917 and in the late 1980s–1990s may look like attempts (albeit ineffective) to replace the earlier forms of diversity governance. The author shows that the ideas of group societal separateness, differential treatment of individuals, group agency, and cohesiveness, as well as a group’s running of its internal affairs, were present in varying degrees in imperial, Soviet, and post-Soviet governments’ thoughts and practices. Academia and civil society were also appropriating and developing these views, and group self-rule on a nonterritorial basis was their logical extension. However, the practical implementation was, in most cases, on a top-down basis, and group agency and self-rule were affirmed mostly rhetorically. The continuity of discourses and practices demonstrates that NTA was an integral part of “normal” and broad ethnopolitical developments across the major historic divides in Northern Eurasia.

Type
Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Association for the Study of Nationalities

This article aims to assess the role played by the ideas of so-called nonterritorial autonomy (NTA) for ethnic groups in the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union, and post-Soviet states. The major question to be considered is whether NTA had a ground-breaking potential for a drastic rearrangement of diversity politics and policies, or was an extension and continuation of broader developments without breakthroughs.

NTA occupies a specific place in scholarly debates about the governance of ethnic and religious diversity. The idea gained currency as a normative one at the turn of the 20th century among left-wing nationalists and social democrats in Central and Eastern Europe; the priority is habitually given to Austro-Marxist theorists who put forward a masterplan denoted as “national-cultural autonomy.” Since then, this idea of ethnic corporations—based on individual membership independent of residence and governed by democratically elected bodies—figures as a beacon showing the way to effective solutions of nationalities’ claims and contestations.

The idea is valued, on the one hand, as a theoretical innovation (although it is much more than one hundred years old), a challenge to the tradition of centering diversity governance on the creation of a territorial nation-state or territorial autonomous entity by the majority ethnicity (Nimni Reference Nimni, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013; Pierre-Caps Reference Pierre-Caps and Dieckhoff2004; Smith Reference Smith, Cordell and Wolff2011). On the other hand, the normative ideal of national-cultural autonomy as a democratically governed quasipolity that enables the groups in question to run their own affairs, simultaneously participate in broader public life, and eschew conflicts over territorial domination serves as a benchmark for practical measures or a tool for assessing certain normative and political frameworks (Brunner and Küpper Reference Brunner, Küpper and Gal2002; Ghai Reference Ghai2005; Malloy, Osipov and Vizi Reference Malloy, Osipov and Vizi2015; Nimni Reference Nimni2007). Although not many scholars see NTA as a universal tool allowing for the resolution of major systemic contradictions and stalemates, many would regard nonterritorial mechanisms as a significant innovation and rupture in thinking about ethnic diversity and nation-building. My task is to judge using concrete country cases whether such a normative outlook entailing far-reaching expectations and high evaluation grades might be justified.

The territory earlier occupied by the Russian Empire and later by the Soviet Union is a place where the ideas of national-cultural autonomy and broader nonterritorial autonomy have played a role in politics and public administration; until recently “cultural autonomy” and similar notions figure in national legislations and public debates as well as match some practical arrangements. This geographical area can thus serve as a case for tracking the origins, trajectories, and outcomes of NTA ideas as well as their correspondence with local practices. This article examines the contexts, linkages, and effects of the ideas referred to as nonterritorial autonomy in the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union, and the post-Soviet states. The questions addressed are (1) whether the ideas of NTA entailed activities aimed at a drastic revision of the earlier diversity governance and (2) whether NTA had been a matter of political contestation and mass mobilization.

The Concept in Question: Nonterritorial Autonomy

As mentioned before, probably the most known version of NTA is the so-called national-cultural autonomy (NCA). It was put forward by Austrian social democrats more than a century ago and envisaged the reshaping of the major nations of Austria into vertically integrated but democratically self-governed corporative bodies based on personal membership (Bauer Reference Bauer2000; Renner Reference Renner and Nimni2005). NCA often serves as a normative ideal and a benchmark, although it had almost never been realized in full in practice.

After Austro-Marxists, the conception of cultural autonomy used to figure in other contexts on other occasions (Eide, Greni, and Lundberg Reference Eide, Greni, Lundberg and Suksi1998; Nimni Reference Nimni and Nimni2005; Reference Nimni2007); its interpretations have gradually proliferated and lost clarity. NTA is a relatively new and the broadest denominator that reflects and represents the notions of group subjectivity and boundedness (Osipov Reference Osipov2018). One can barely talk about a single conception; there is rather an array of notions or even ambiguous perceptions (Coakley Reference Coakley2016). The tags of NTA, “cultural” or “personal” autonomy (often used interchangeably with NCA), have been attributed to smaller-scale and lesser-ambitious arrangements envisaging ethnically distinct educational and cultural institutions or self-government schemes (Malloy and Salat Reference Malloy and Salat2020; Prina Reference Prina2020b). These naming exercises and practical suggestions rest on two usually unreflective assumptions. The first one is the regarding of ethnic politics as processes centering on territorial domination and its contestation; the second one is the tacit perception of ethnic or similar groups as entities possessing agency and cohesion, hence the view that these entities can manifest autonomy in a variety of forms.

Since there is no sole and uniform interpretation of NTA, one can talk about a framework that encompasses an array of practices that do not necessarily coexist in the given time and within the given phenomenon. Among the major ones are (1) the framing of ethnic groups as separate and cohesive social entities; (2) personal regimes, or the distinguishing and treating of individuals because of their ascribed group belonging; (3) organizational settings on an ethnic basis; and (4) autonomy in a narrow sense—that is, the treatment of groups as entities that can run their own affairs.

One can look at the evolution of NTA in political practice from two compatible perspectives. The first one is to address the issue as the structure and content of elites’ normative thought. Social imagination and the phenomena of social imaginary have been productively analyzed in a range of disciplinary areas, such as Marxist political philosophy (Castoriadis Reference Castoriadis and Blarney1987; Lefort Reference Lefort and Macey1988), social psychology (Tolman Reference Tolman1948), social geography (Kitchin Reference Kitchin1994), and macrohistory (Burbank and Cooper Reference Burbank and Cooper2010; Wolff Reference Wolff1994). Over the last two decades, this approach enriched the studies of nationalism and imperial governance (Blitstein Reference Blitstein2006b; Miller Reference Miller, Rule, Miller and Rieber2004, Reference Miller2008; Tolz Reference Tolz2001). Generally, the issue under consideration is “a complex web of discursive practices that included ideological motivation, symbolic, toponymic, artistic exploration and familiarization” (Miller Reference Miller, Rule, Miller and Rieber2004, 14).

The other perspective rests on the study of practices of government, and it is also tested in the research of nation building and imperial rule (Blitstein Reference Blitstein2006b). According to Foucault and his followers who studied governmentality, practices and the regimes of practices exist independently of a certain state and government. Practices do not emanate from “state” as such; rather, “state” can be conceived as a “composite reality,” a combination of phenomena filled in with practices (Foucault Reference Foucault1982; Reference Foucault, Senellart and Burchell2009, 109).

The consideration of group-based autonomy as a referencing notion and an array of political motions against the background of elites’ imagination and practices of governance may help clarify NTA’s role and effects. Were these ideas a rupture in elites’ and activists’ worldview and a driving force of social movements and changes, or were they merely an epiphenomenon or by-product of the already established imaginaries and practices?

On the surface, there were two peaks of NTA politics and policies in Northern Eurasia throughout the 20th century. The first one took place immediately after the collapse of the monarchy and until the final Bolshevik takeover in most of the former empire. It included extensive scholarly and partisan debates about NTA (at that time mainly named as “cultural-national autonomy,” or merely cultural autonomy) as a way of restructuring the multinational country and then several attempts of some social movements and governments of breakaway entities to adopt legislation and set up organizational structures that in their view qualified as cultural autonomy.

The second peak period began in the late 1980s during the overall liberalization in the USSR and during the first years of the independent statehoods; alternatively, one can say that it is not over yet. It started with the public debates about national-cultural autonomy and brought about respective legal provisions in a few successor states as well as certain organizational settings.

Round One: 1917–1922

Developments

From the early 1900s, most all-imperial left-wing parties and nationalist organizations of non-Russian peoples in varying degrees adhered to the idea of “cultural-national autonomy” (Bowring Reference Bowring and Nimni2005, 166; Carrère d’Encausse Reference Carrère d’Encausse and Festinger1992, 22–43; Mikhailov Reference Mikhailov1997, 165–174; Nam Reference Nam2016), as it was predominantly termed at that time. Basically, these ideas were imported from Austrian social democrats; in part, they were elaborated inside the empire (Bowring Reference Bowring, Malloy and Palermo2015, 145–146). The liberals were generally skeptical about all autonomy propositions but endorsed equality to all nationalities, the public usage of minority languages, and separate minority institutions. The radical left (the Bolsheviks) rejected the idea as favorable to “bourgeois nationalism” and detrimental to the unity of the working class (Khripachenko Reference Khripachenko, Miller, Sdvizhkov and Shierle2012; Natsional′nyi Reference Nam2016).

In the immediate aftermath of the monarchy’s downfall in February 1917, most liberal and socialist parties reaffirmed their commitment to “cultural-national autonomy” while the Bolsheviks kept declaring exclusively the unlimited peoples’ right to self-determination, assuming the right to secession (L’vova, Nam, and Naumova Reference L’vova, Nam and Naumova1993; Osipov Reference Osipov2004, 47–48).

A few national movements raised immediate claims about NTA and started practical arrangements. Notably, already during the 1905 revolution, some national movements, the Buryats first (Montgomery Reference Montgomery2011), elaborated such forms of self-organization and collective decision-making as nationality congresses, and their convening reemerged in 1917. In the summer–autumn of 1917 there were two all-Russian Moslem congresses that declared the national-cultural autonomy of the Moslem (assumingly Turkic) population and started forming the all-imperial National Council (Khabutdinov Reference Khabutdinov2010, 163; Khabrieva Reference Khabrieva2003, 25–26). Lower-level congresses of Moslems and individual Turkic peoples were convened also in the Volga region, Central Asia, and other areas (Lysenko et al. Reference Lysenko, Barmin, Anisimova, Bochkareva and Tarasova2017, 197–205). Among them were provincial and all-national conventions of the Kazakhs (Amanzholova Reference Amanzholova2009, 167–182).

After the Bolshevik takeover, some independent polities within the former empire were declaring their adherence to the ideas of NTA and partly took practical steps. The most productive initiatives took place in the Baltic States.Footnote 1 Estonia enacted a constitutional provision about cultural autonomy and in 1925 passed a comprehensive law about the corporate organization of minorities (Smith Reference Smith and Smith2005; Reference Smith2016). Two ethnic corporations (the Jewish and the German ones) were functioning up until the Soviet annexation of Estonia (Smith Reference Smith2016). Latvia established semiautonomous units governing minority schools within the system of public education (Saleniece and Kuznetsovs Reference Saleniece, Kuznetsovs, Williams and Sfikas1999; Smith Reference Smith, Smith, Galbreath and Swain2010). Lithuania declared the government’s plans to set up a ministry on Jewish affairs and a corporate organization for minorities, but the 1926 coup put an end to this development (Dohrn Reference Dohrn, Nikzentaitis, Schreiner and Staliunas2003, 162–166).

The Ukrainian Central Rada (Council) included the NTA provision into independent Ukraine’s constituent declaration (The Third Universal) of November 1917 and then, in January 1918, adopted a special law termed as the law on “national-personal autonomy.” However, the republic was short-lived and unstable, and the plans regarding minority protection remained on paper (Goldelman Reference Goldelman and Luchkovich1968; Frankel Reference Frankel, Aster and Potichnyj1990; Liber Reference Liber1987). The Country’s Council (Sfatul Ţării) placed two provisions on NTA into its declaration of December 1917, establishing the Moldovan Democratic Republic, which also did not exist long (Deklaratsiia Reference Avdeev and Ungureanu2000).

The democratic but fragile and short-lived anti-Bolshevik governments of Siberia in 1918 also had plans regarding cultural autonomy for minorities (Cherniak Reference Cherniak1998, vol. 1). The Far Eastern Republic, which the Bolsheviks established in 1920 as a parliamentary democracy and a temporary “buffer” between Soviet Russia and Japan, included a provision about cultural autonomy in its constitution. The constitution envisaged the self-organization of minorities as public law corporations (Osnovnoi Reference Cherniak1998), but the local Bolsheviks effectively obstructed the adoption of the respective legislation, and in 1922 the Far Eastern Republic was absorbed into the Russian Federation (Sablin Reference Sablin2019; Nam Reference Nam2009, 383–430).

Assessment

The debates and arrangements fitting in the framework of NTA in the aftermath of the Romanov monarchy’s collapse fall into two unequal parts. The first—the smaller one—were claims and respective attempts from the grass roots. There were only several undertakings of civil society organizations aimed at the creation of ethnicity-based corporate public bodies. It is noteworthy that they took place in the time when most nationalist groups in the empire’s borderlands were seeking a reassembling of common multinational statehood rather than its partition (Gerasimov Reference Gerasimov2017). The overall situation changed rapidly, and these initiatives were doomed to be short lived. The largest one was the 1917 Moslem Congresses and the establishment of the all-Russian Moslem Council. However, it was shortly dissolved and lost the competition to other Turkic movements (like Tatars and Bashkirs) that sought territorial autonomy or independent statehoods (Khabrieva Reference Khabrieva2003, 25–26). Only a few conventions of national minorities at the regional level were tending to become recurrent and pursued the goal of coordinating their activities instead of setting up permanent governing bodies and recorded membership (Lotkin Reference Lotkin2006, 30–37; Nam Reference Nam2009, 118–170, 188–282; Sablin Reference Sablin2016, 68–89, 116–140), but this experiment was ultimately ceased by the Bolsheviks. Most nationalities’ congresses (like the Kazakh ones) aimed at the arrangement of territorial autonomy.

Most initiatives related to NTA were the manifestations of allegiances to party programs and top-down activities of the authorities in the empire’s splinters. The constitutional provisions, declarations, and pieces of legislation that stipulated nationalities’ rights and nonterritorial autonomy followed the fashion of that time and turned out to be either unviable (as well as the respective new statehoods) or adopted for gaining minorities’ loyalty rather than for a full-fledged implementation.

The Background and Earlier Developments

The ideas and practices fitting in the NTA framework were not unknown to the empire’s governing elites and to the public, including academics and political activists. The Russian imperial ruleFootnote 2 rested on a complex and fluid institutional mosaic that included separate governance regimes and public institutions designed for different population categories and territories (Burbank Reference Burbank2006, Reference Burbank and Tomohiko2018; Khoury and Glebov Reference Khoury and Glebov2017; Morrison Reference Morrison2012). The government was striving to rationalize the system of rule in accordance with the ideals of Polizeistaat and thus was transforming normative and organizational settings for the purpose of better governability and social integration (Kappeler Reference Kappeler2007).

During the 19th and early 20th centuries, the government was gradually shifting from religious, estate, and “tribal” to ethnonational interpretations of pluralism and was seeking new modes of the population’s loyalty. Discourses of race, ethnicity, and nationhood in imperial Russia developed in line with the pan-European circulation of knowledge (Raffass Reference Raffass2012, 183; Tolz Reference Tolz and Rainbow2019, 48).

The emerging civil society contributed to the evolution of public perceptions of peoplehood and cultural distinctness. From the mid-19th century, the Russian intellectuals launched and advanced public debates about nationhood as the basis of state legitimacy (Bakhturina Reference Bakhturina2004, 5; Hirsch Reference Hirsch2005; Karnishina Reference Karnishina2011; Knight Reference Knight, Hoffmann and Kotsonis2000). Academia provided for the elaboration of ethnonational categorizations in the framework of ethnographic studies (Hirsch Reference Hirsch2005). From the 1870s, public intellectuals boosted the understanding of the Russian Empire as a constellation of peoples who required progressive “development” as culturally distinct social entities and whose separate identities deserved support as the fundament of the empire’s cohesion (Hirsch Reference Hirsch2005, 30–51; Tolz Reference Tolz2005).

Political parties and movements that emerged in the early 20th century, along with academia, engaged in public debates about the “nationalities question.” From that time, NTA (“cultural-national autonomy”) became one of the most discussed issues, and the political spectrum, as mentioned, demonstrated a variety of approaches.

The modes of categorizing of the subject population were evolving; the distinction based on estate and religion was gradually gaining new meanings as ethnic, racial, and national divides. Moreover, the officialdom was gradually reinterpreting estate and religious belonging as a proxy for ethnic nationality (Crews Reference Crews2009; Slocum Reference Slocum1998; Werth Reference Werth2014). In some cases, the establishment of estate groups led to the formation of nationalities (Cadiot Reference Cadiot2005; Khoury and Glebov Reference Khoury and Glebov2017, 51). A good example would be the Bashkirs who were governed as a military service corporation with special duties and privileges; the group boundaries after the lifting of the corporate status in the 1860s became the basis for the formation of a distinct ethnonation (Steinwedel Reference Steinwedel2016).

The government operated the concepts of peoplehood and nationality; the officialdom considered the country as a combination of groups, as distinct social entities (and sometimes as adversary agents) that in principle required differential treatment. Policies on the ground throughout the 19th century were increasingly dependent on security concerns and the need for better governability. Security considerations related to the treatment of potentially disloyal groups (first and foremost Poles and Jews) (Campbell Reference Anan’ich and Barzilov2001, 210–212) and were theoretically underpinned by “military statistics,” a part of strategic military planning (Dameshek and Remnev Reference Dameshek and Remnev2007, 63; Holquist Reference Holquist, Suny and Martin2001; Rich Reference Rich1996).

The major official category for the non-Russian groups was “aliens” (inorodtsy) which denoted categories deemed as unassimilable (Jews) or socially “backward” and thus required state paternalism (basically the indigenous populations of Siberia and the steppe nomads) (Korkunov Reference Korkunov1909, 355–366; Shternberg Reference Shternberg and Kastelianskii1910). The meaning of inorodtsy in public discourses and administrative practices was expanding over time and gradually covering all non-Russian groups (Cadiot Reference Cadiot2005; Slocum Reference Slocum1998; Steinwedel Reference Steinwedel, Kotsonis and Hoffman2000). Administratively, the tsarist authorities failed to elaborate an effective mechanism for determining individual ethnic nationality; personal status was generally regulated through confessional and estate institutions or administrative discretion (Gorizontov Reference Gorizontov1999, 100–118; Slocum Reference Slocum1998; Weeks Reference Weeks1996). However, the usage of nationality in the practices of governance was gradually widening. A remarkable development was the introduction of nationalities curia into the municipal electoral system (zemstvo) in the empire’s Western regions in 1907–1911 (Weeks Reference Weeks1994; Reference Weeks1996, 145–171).

The plans for social integration rested on the ideas of “state-sponsored evolutionism,” (Hirsch Reference Hirsch2005, 7–8) aimed at “civilizing” assumingly “backward” inorodtsy and providing for their social and cultural rapprochement with the Slavonic Orthodox core (Campbell Reference Anan’ich and Barzilov2001; Lysenko et al. Reference Lysenko, Barmin, Anisimova, Bochkareva and Tarasova2017). This policy occasionally included the creation, maintenance, and transformation of temporary and transitional structures for self-administration or mixed administration based on personal rather than purely territorial principles (Rieber Reference Rieber1989; Suny Reference Suny1993, 23–26).

In certain cases, the government tolerated, established, or maintained institutions and practices of self-administration based on individuals’ belonging to ascriptive categories. The grounds were (1) previously acknowledged confessional and estate privileges and (2) transitional settings for upbringing new, more loyal local elites and increasing the civic consciousness of the subject population (grazhdanstvennost’, “civicness”) (Campbell Reference Anan’ich and Barzilov2001, 214; Jersild Reference Jersild, Brower and Lazzerini1997; Uyama Reference Uyama and Uyama2007, 43; Yaroshevski Reference Yaroshevski, Brower and Lazzerini1997). The first type comprised the self-administration of confessional groupsFootnote 3 and culturally distinct estate self-government.Footnote 4 The second type can be denoted as the self-rule of inorodtsy (“aliens”) and mixed rule. Some categories of non-Slavic and non-Orthodox population were subject to a special legal order whereby some issues were in the jurisdiction of the tsarist executive and some of the indigenous institutions. Some groups (primarily, the nomads of Siberia and Kazakhstan) from the end of the 18th century enjoyed the right of electing councils and officials at the local and regional levels, even though the design of this self-administration was changing, and the practice was gradually curtailed (Agadzhanov et al. Reference Agadzhanov, Mukhamed’iarov, Trepavlov, Bulgakov, Grosul, Istomina and Fedosova1998, 61–84, 250–259; Bobrovnikov Reference Bobrovnikov, Anan’ich and Barzilov2001; Dameshek and Remnev Reference Dameshek and Remnev2007, 228–237; Glebov Reference Glebov, Gerasimov, Kusber and Semyonov2009, 145–148; Jersild Reference Jersild, Brower and Lazzerini1997).

To sum up, the imperial administration and intellectuals throughout the 19th century were familiar with the categorization that currently would be deemed ethnonational; group agency, institutions separated along ethnic lines, and the possibility of group self-government were part of their worldview. Such practices also were part of the government repertoires. By the beginning of the 20th century, autonomy arrangements in a narrow sense became a topic for public debates and a component of party politics.

Round Two: 1988–2021

Developments

During the “restructuring” and overall liberalization of the USSR in 1987–1991 and the debates about nationalities issues, numerous intellectuals and oppositional activists commenced promoting the ideas of NTAFootnote 5 as an alternative to the assumingly flawed Soviet nationalities policy (Osipov Reference Osipov2004, 62–64). The leadership of the Soviet constituent republics, which rapidly started claiming sovereign rights and thus opposing the USSR central authorities, was also resorting to the concept of NTA for gaining the support of their own ethnic minorities (Osipov Reference Osipov2004, 60–62). For example, the 1990 Sovereignty Declaration of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) promised “the self-determination of peoples in national-territorial and national-cultural forms”; in 1991, Latvia enacted the law about the cultural autonomy of national minorities.

The leadership of the Communist Party (CPSU) and the central government were reluctant to defend Lenin’s dogma about the unacceptability of NTA. In 1989, the CPSU policy documents (Natsional’naia 1989, 212–235)Footnote 6 and publications of the mainstream scholars (Bromlei Reference Bromlei1989; Zubov and Salmin Reference Zubov and Salmin1989)Footnote 7 were still avoiding the concept of cultural autonomy but in fact offered solution based on nonterritorial organization, special mechanisms of group representation, and corporate self-government. The USSR law “On free national development of the USSR citizens residing outside of their national-territorial units or not having such in the USSR” of 26 April 1990 (Zakon Reference SSSR1990) did not contain the term “cultural autonomy” but proposed the creation of “national-cultural centers” (art. 13) and “nationalities societies” (art. 14) that could be coordinated by public umbrella organizations (art. 17). The 28th (the last) CPSU Congress convened in June 1990 already openly debated national-cultural autonomy (particularly, as a promising option for Germans and other formerly deported peoples) and included the concepts of “self-government” and “cultural autonomy” into its resolution on nationalities issues (Rezolutsiia 1990, 171). At the same time, the officialdom reportedly started discussing NTA as a solution for the Crimean Tatars who were returning to their homeland and an alternative to the Crimean Tatar territorial autonomy in Crimea (Guboglo and Chervonnaia Reference Guboglo and Chervonnaya1992, 206–207). Thus, all the contributors to the late Soviet politics demonstrated a similar vision of nationalities issues and a high degree of flexibility and pragmatism.

After the Soviet breakdown, four countries (Estonia, Latvia, Russia, and Ukraine) employ the concepts of “cultural autonomy” or “national-cultural autonomy” in their legislation. In Latvia and Ukraine, the mentioning of cultural autonomy is merely a hollow declaration (Osipov Reference Osipov2013; Yupsanis Reference Yupsanis2017). In Estonia, entities that can be established under the 1993 law on cultural autonomy do not gain legal personality and are devoid of any guarantees of public support (Lagerspetz Reference Lagerspetz2014; Poleshchuk Reference Poleshchuk, Nimni, Osipov and Smith2013). In Russia, organizations set up according to the 1996 law on “national-cultural autonomy” (NCA) are civil society organizations that enjoy less rights and face more restrictions than “ordinary” nongovernmental organizations (Osipov Reference Osipov2013, 10–11; Prina Reference Prina2020a).

Both in Estonia and Russia the respective national laws follow the idea of facilitating the creation of minorities’ corporate organizations on a ground-up basis. It is supposed to be either by voluntary enrollment to the minority roster set up by civil society organizations (Estonia) or by setting up large ethnicity-based organizations from below—first by uniting local entities into regional ones and then regional ones into the federal corporation (Russia) (Osipov Reference Osipov2004, 112–135). However, bureaucratic restrictions, shortage of financial resources, and limited functionality make these organizational schemes impractical.

In the late 1980s through the early 1990s, there were two or three bottom-up motions within the USSR boundaries aimed at the creation of a centralized corporate structure under the banner of NTA, but they all failed (Osipov Reference Osipov2004, 62, 73–74). Besides, the institution of “peoples’ congresses” resurrected in Russia. Initially, the “congresses” sought to accumulate bottom-up movements of the eponymous ethnicities within Russia’s constituent republics (such as Tatars, Bashkirs, and Mordva). Shortly thereafter they were hijacked by republican governments and are currently funded and orchestrated by the regional officialdom (Osipov Reference Osipov2011).

Assessment

The second round of NTA debates, politics, and policies, which started in the late 1980s, differs from the first one of 1917–1922 because the latter had been interrupted by the Bolsheviks’ coming to power in the most part of the former empire, and no one knows how far the developments could otherwise go. Indeed, the topic of NTA, or NCA, was a significant part of public debates in the dissolving Soviet Union and then in the newly independent states. Some scholars praised NCA as a significant turn in official nationalities policies and an innovative approach leading to the prevention of conflicts and providing for the participation of all ethnicities in public life and state-building (Drobizheva Reference Drobizheva2003, 10–29; Zorin Reference Zorin2003, 223–262). The outcomes, however, deserve a more modest assessment.

There have been very few bottom-up claims and initiatives aimed at NTA as bodies endowed with public competencies and functions; in Russia, before the adoption of the NCA law in 1996, the idea had no practical demand (Saveliev Reference Saveliev2010, 164). The number of NCAs in Russia has been growing despite this form’s impracticability, and the reason is that ethnic activists have been following the rules of the symbolic game imposed by the government (Osipov Reference Osipov2013; Prina Reference Prina2020a).

Such organizational form as “peoples’ congresses” resemble the full-fledged idea of “national-cultural autonomy” because it includes publicly elected self-governing bodies acting on behalf of their constituencies—ethnic groups as such. However, the rationales for the creation and running of these institutions are far from cultural self-government. Initially they included deliberations and lobbying before public authorities; after a short evolution, the “peoples’ congresses” have become the support groups of the regional governments.

Most initiatives resembling NTA or represented as such were part of top-down state policies or propositions of political parties, individual politicians, or public opinion makers. Most of these motions were of symbolic character: they voiced the ideas of NTA or analogues for delivering certain messages to the target audiences. Among these messages were the critical attitude towards the Soviet-style ethnicity-based federalism and territorial autonomy; the desire to stress the multiethnic character of the country and to please minorities by acknowledging their status as part of the polity; and the interest in minorities’ self-organization at their own expense for carrying out nonpolitical activities. In terms of practical achievements, the legislation primarily serves as a vehicle for delivering these messages. Estonia and Russia have entities that bear the official label of cultural or national-cultural autonomy, but they enjoy no substantive advantages before other civil society organizations. Notably, the post-Soviet governments are striving to limit the activities of ethnicity-based civil society organizations to the cultural sphere and to obstruct their engagement in politics.

Within a broader context, one can see the persistence of discursive elements and institutional settings fundamental for nonterritorial arrangements that were inherited from the earlier period. After the Soviet Union’s dissolution, most governments and legislatures of the newly independent states use the languages of group subjectivity and group “development”; ethnicities are still framed as social entities composed of individuals with ascribed group belonging. Some post-Soviet constitutions refer to ethnicities as separate entities, social actors, and even right holders. The constitution of Russia postulates the “equality and self-determination of peoples”; the constitutions of Russia and Ukraine guarantee the rights of indigenous peoples and national minorities; the constitutions of Belarus, Turkmenistan, and internationally unrecognized Transnistria in Moldova mention “relations between ethnic groups.” Over the last 30 years, the old mainstream vision of group and individual categorizations has been still in place. The post-Soviet polities have mainly (but not fully) abolished the institution of officially recorded ethnicity (Aktürk Reference Aktürk2012, 229–258), but individual ethnic nationality remains a practically recognizable characteristic, and informal discriminatory practices persist.

The Preceding Developments

Prior to 1917, the Bolsheviks were against all kinds of ethnicity-based substate arrangements and stood for either regional autonomy or self-determination as secession (Bowring Reference Bowring, Malloy and Palermo2015, 147–148; Tadevosian Reference Tadevosian1970, 65–81). Lenin and his associates vehemently opposed the ideas of NTA. After the 1917 takeover, they demonstrated a pragmatic turn to ethnicity-based territorial autonomy as a political tool (Pearson Reference Pearson and McAuley1991; Leonov Reference Leonov1997, 128–129; Slezkine Reference Slezkine1994b, 419–420); the negative attitude to NTA basically remained intact. However, the rhetoric and practical arrangements require a more nuanced approach.

The Bolshevik “nationalities policy” was not uniform from 1917 to 1991; respectively, the attitudes toward institutional arrangements and the official rhetoric were volatile. However, some elements relevant to the NTA framework persisted throughout the communist rule—namely, the rhetoric of ethnonational sovereignty and group rights, personal ethnic nationality independent of territory, and separate institutions divided along ethnic lines. In certain periods before perestroika, the Bolshevik rulers partly acknowledged the acceptability of nonterritorial self-governance.

First, the Soviet state formally institutionalized ethnicities as an official category for the purposes of statistics and administration. In the 1930s, they introduced the institution of prescribed and officially recorded individual ethnic belonging independent of the place of residence (Aktürk Reference Aktürk2012, 197–228; Brubaker Reference Brubaker1996, 30–40; Simonsen Reference Simonsen1999). Much was done for the institutionalization of individual ethnicity as part of governance and the daily life of people (Blitstein Reference Blitstein2006a; Brown Reference Brown2004; Slezkine Reference Slezkine1994a).

The Bolsheviks looked upon the subject society as a combination of ethnic groups existent in principle across territorial divides and as entities requiring state-sponsored development. This rhetoric portraying the new statehood as a union of “nations” was present in the policy declarations and in the first Soviet constitution. The Declaration of the Rights of the Peoples of Russia adopted by the Council of Peoples Commissars on November 2 (15), 1917,Footnote 8 just one week after the Bolshevik coup, introduced several concepts that until the breakdown of the USSR served as a basis for the official Communist rhetoric. This vocabulary included “voluntary union of peoples,” “equality and sovereignty of peoples,” and “free development of national minorities and ethnic groups” (Dekrety Sovetskoi Vlasti 1957, 39–41). According to the Declaration of the Rights of Working and Exploited People (adopted on January 12, Reference Lazerson1918, at the III Congress of Soviets, at that time formally the supreme body of power), the Russian Soviet Republic constituted a “free union of free nations” (Dekrety Sovetskoi Vlasti 1957, 321–323). In July 1918, the declaration was incorporated into the first constitution of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) as its first chapter.Footnote 9 The preamble of the first USSR constitution of 1924 described the Soviet Union as a “voluntary association of equal peoples” but without referring to the national (ethnic) statehood of the constituent republics.

The official discourse of the country as a union of “peoples” in principle decoupled from the territory and of ethnic groups’ “development” was surviving all evolutions of the domestic policy. For example, the 1961 Program of the Communist Party operated the concepts of all nations’ “sovereignty,” “equal rights,” and “development” (Programma 1961, 112–116). Concurrently, vilification of the very concept of national-cultural autonomy was an obligatory element of almost all academic and propaganda publications concerning “nationalities question” (Kutafin Reference Kutafin2014, 724–726; see Chernov Reference Chernov1984, 11–24).

Although ethnicity-based territorial autonomy was the core element of state-building, the Bolsheviks almost 15 years after the coup widely used public organizational settings divided along ethnic lines (Amanzholova Reference Amanzholova2010; Mikhailov Reference Mikhailov1997, 279–287; Musaev Reference Musaev2004, 96–97; Slezkine Reference Slezkine1994b, 422; Suny Reference Suny1993, 86). Interestingly, even Vladimir Lenin himself acknowledged the acceptability of NTA under certain conditions (Lenin Reference Lenin and Sharapov1970, 462). Most well documented are the national sections of the Communist Party, primarily the Jewish ones (Gitelman Reference Gitelman1972, 250–252, 321–440; Pinkus Reference Pinkus1988, 56–64), and separate educational and cultural institutions created irrespective of “national-territorial” entities (Amanzholova Reference Amanzholova2010; Blitstein Reference Blitstein2006a; Chebotareva Reference Chebotareva2008).

The Bolsheviks also employed the institution of people’s congresses as ethnic groups’ elected representative bodies (Osipov Reference Osipov2011, 6, 21). The 1925 RSFSR constitution envisaged that new autonomous territorial entities can be established “on the basis of the respective nationalities’ congresses.” In fact, the Bolshevik authorities shortly after 1917 resorted to such procedures in the course of establishing the Chuvash, Marii, Udmurt, German, and some other territorial autonomous entities (Chistiakov Reference Chistiakov2003, 303; German Reference German2007, 19–31; Ivanov and Klementiev Reference Ivanov and Klementiev2010, 22–27; Mineeva Reference Mineeva2009).

“Nationalities’ congresses” ended in the late 1920s; separate ethnicity-based public institutions survived up until the early 1930s (Donninghaus Reference Donninghaus2011, 153; Gitelman Reference Gitelman1972, 487). In these frameworks, the Bolsheviks resorted to electoral procedures but preferred direct party control; the degree of independent decision making and real self-administration was low (Donninghaus Reference Donninghaus2011, 136–137, 142–148).

In the late 1940s, the official legal theorists put forward the doctrine of “national” ethnic sovereignty (Levin Reference Levin1948); the authorities had been recurrently using the rhetoric earlier, from 1917 (Donninghaus Reference Donninghaus2011, 142–143; Tadevosian Reference Tadevosian1970, 127). Assumingly, sovereignty is threefold: it included popular, state, and “nationality” outfits; each type was not restricted to one another, and “national” sovereignty was enjoyed by all ethnic groups regardless of territory but could materialize in different ways and forms of “self-determination” (Shevtsov Reference Shevtsov1978; Sudnitsin Reference Sudnitsin1958). This approach survived to date in Russian academia (Porfir’ev Reference Porfir’ev2009).

Conclusion

Indeed, the ideas of NTA are part of ethnopolitical history in the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union, and the post-Soviet states. The related practical initiatives and arrangements took place within short periods following the empire’s collapse and have been taking place in Eurasia since the late 1980s liberalization in the USSR. In terms of utilitarian outcomes and effectiveness, NTA in a narrow sense is far from being a decisive factor in law making and administration or a matter of political contestations.

In both periods of burgeoning NTA initiatives, there were few grassroot motions and mass claims of NTA’s potential beneficiaries. Most initiatives were parts of top-down state action or party politics, and most activities belonged to the symbolic domain (often governmental gestures aimed to please minorities) and did not entail significant institutional changes.

Against a broader background of elite imagination and practices of government, the rhetoric of NTA and related practical initiatives do not look like a revolutionary turn but rather an extension of broader and continuous trends of thought and action. This general approach can be termed, following Rogers Brubaker, as “deterritorialized groupism,”Footnote 10 or imagining and treating the society as a combination of internally cohesive groups, composed of individuals with a common identity and, in principle, independent of territory. An outcome is the circulation of discursive forms aimed at reconciling the country’s integrity and cohesion with the recognition of ethnic plurality. One should add that in this regard the authorities can frame, evaluate, and treat diversity positively or negatively, for a variety of reasons ranging from security considerations to “state-sponsored evolutionism” (Hirsch Reference Hirsch2005, 7). The perception of groups as separate entities and potentially social agents can generate the rhetoric of “autonomy” that serves multiple purposes of framing diversity and communicating with the subject constituencies.

Such perceptions are linked to a set of relatively stable regimes of practices, such as the differential treatment of individuals according to ascribed group affiliation or even the establishment of differentiated personal regimes, and the creation of separate or specific organizational frameworks for different groups (Burbank Reference Burbank and Tomohiko2018). In certain cases, such arrangements amounted to self-governing settings or were framed as an embodiment of group will and self-determination.

If one uses NTA as an optic for assessing diversity politics and policies in the transits between the major types of statehood in Eurasia, this study speaks for a continuity more than for a rupture. The modes of imagination and practices of government described above are relatively independent of political regime and display no straightforward linkage with bottom-up mobilization on ethnic grounds. There are also no reasons to distinguish between imperial or national policies (Blitstein Reference Blitstein2006b); both include the consolidation of the cultural core and, to a certain degree, preservation of separate groups’ cultural traits. Within the overall period in question, nationalities policy was never toleration of the ethnic mosaic taken as a given or the accommodation of group claims through bargaining. It was subject to broader considerations of social engineering, in turn aimed at the rationalization of government, progressive social change, and broadly understood security.

Along with the common patterns across historic divides, there were significant changes. While the imperial authorities did not secure a coherent and effective practice of individual and group identification, the Bolsheviks achieved this objective through “scientific” categorization, censuses, indoctrination through education and propaganda, and, finally, obligatory passport nationality. All these institutions except for the recorded individual ethnicity have basically survived, albeit the idea of personal ethnic belonging as an issue of public interest persists in politics and administration.

The major change in transit from imperial to Soviet rule was the drastic revision of official rhetoric. While the imperial authorities overtly denied group claims, the Soviet rules extensively used the language of group rights and even sovereignty; this vocabulary survived to date in numerous constitutions, laws, and policy statements. The Bolsheviks promoted “nations’ right to self-determination” and national statehood in an ethnic sense, but the real practices of government did not envisage any manifestations of group agency if not authorized and orchestrated by the state. Respectively, autonomy on a territorial and nonterritorial basis has existed merely as a discursive frame rather than an organizational setting. A similar gap between rhetoric and action persists in the post-Soviet diversity policies: some countries employ the language of group rights, but independent bottom-up claims and other activities are either suppressed or marginalized.

In other words, the major novelty that the Soviet power brought about is the patterns of “decoupling” substantive activities from ceremonial representation (Meyer and Rowan Reference Meyer and Rowan1977, 356-357), or of “systemic hypocrisy” (Brunsson Reference Brunsson1989)—the gap between rhetoric and action of an organization. However, the tsarist government was also not sterile in this respect—certain ethnic categories were recurrently regarded and treated as collective agents but in the capacity of a potential or actual adversary. All the governments have also demonstrated a varying degree of pragmatism and flexibility in both talks and action.

Finally, the analyzed case prompts a question as to the value of the concept of NTA both as an analytical tool and normative ideal. First, the practices identified as group self-governance cannot be clearly distinguished from a broader political context and from adjacent arrangements and rhetoric; thus, the concept of NTA can blur the issue under consideration. Second, the practices resembling NTA neither predetermine nor obstruct emancipation and the dismantling of power hierarchies.

Disclosures

None.

Footnotes

1 The Baltic policies were also affected by the newly established post-Versailles ideological, political, and legal framework for the protection of national minorities.

2 There are no clear temporary boundaries of the practices outlined below; the following description concerns the period from the late 18th century to the monarchy’s downfall.

3 Confessional policies combined administrative supervision with collegial management and the delegation of some decision-making competencies to the clergy and communities at large (Dolbilov Reference Dolbilov2010; Werth Reference Werth, Ieda and Uyama2006, 209–210). In some cases, religion was conflated with ethnicity or served as a proxy; noteworthy are the Jewish community and the Armenian Apostolic Church, whom the officialdom perceived as attributes of separate peoplehoods. The Jews were granted self-government in the form of kahal or kehila after the first partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1772. The kahals survived up until 1844 and were replaced by a direct bureaucratic control (Nathans Reference Nathans2002, 23–35); however, the government kept regarding local Jewish communities as middlemen between the officialdom and the subjects of the Judaic faith (Dolbilov et al. Reference Dolbilov, Miller, Berezhnaya, Budnitskii, Makushin, Pravilova and Tsiunchuk2006, 301–340; Kandel’ Reference Kandel’2014, 128–129). The Armenian Apostolic Church was officially acknowledged as a church of the Armenian people, granted extended privileges and exterritorial self-rule in 1836. This arrangement aimed at securing some degree of control over Armenian communities abroad (primarily in the Ottoman Empire) and were partly based on the involvement of the secular public (Diakin Reference Diakin1998, 18, 23; Lazerson Reference Lazerson1918, 36–37; Werth Reference Werth, Ieda and Uyama2006, 209–210).

4 The emblematic example is the German nobility of the Baltic provinces—namely, the territories of nowadays Estonia and Latvia. The nobility of this area after the Russian annexation in the early 18th century retained land property, corporate privileges, German as the only official language, and corporate self-government. Another case are the colonists mostly from German lands whom the imperial government invited to settle in the scarcely populated Volga region and the newly captured Black Sea area (Andreeva Reference Andreeva, Anan’ich and Barzilov2001; Fleischhauer Reference Fleischhauer1981). Up until the 1870s they were exempted from conscription; they enjoyed tax exempts, religious freedoms, and self-government rights (Fleischhauer Reference Fleischhauer1981).

5 The first one who publicly raised the issue was a famous proreformist publicist, Gavriil Popov (Popov and Adzhubei Reference Popov and Adzhubei1988).

6 The 1989 CPSU Platform on nationalities policy under the “autonomy” headline suggested the creation of “national-cultural centers,” as well as public coordinative and representative bodies for individual nationalities (Natsional’naia 1989, 226–228).

7 It is unlikely that at that time such publications would not have been authorized by high-ranked CPSU supervisors.

8 According to the Julian and Gregorian calendars.

9 The Soviet Constitutions are quoted from the officially commissioned legal database, available at constitution.garant.ru.

10 About the notion of “groupism” see Brubaker (Reference Brubaker2004).

References

Agadzhanov, Sergei, Mukhamed’iarov, Shamil, Trepavlov, Vadim, Bulgakov, Mikhail, Grosul, Vladislav, Istomina, Enessa, Fedosova, El’mira et al. 1998. Natsional’nye okrainy Rossiiskoi Imperii: Stanovleniie i razvitiie sistemy upravleniia [The Nationalities Margins of the Russian Empire: The Formation and Development of the Government System]. Moscow: Slavianskii Dialog.Google Scholar
Aktürk, Şener. 2012. Regimes of Ethnicity and Nationhood in Germany, Russia, and Turkey. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amanzholova, Dina. 2009. Na izlome: Alash v etnopoliticheskoy istorii Kazakhstana [At the Turning Point: The Alash Party in the Ethnopolitical History of Kazakhstan]. Almaty: The Taymas Publishing House.Google Scholar
Amanzholova, Dina. 2010. Formatirovaniie sovetskosti: Natsional’nye men’shinstva v ethnopoliticheskom landshafte SSSR. 1920–1930-e gg. [Formatting the Sovietness: National Minorities in the Political Landscape of the USSR. The 1920s–1930s]. Moscow: Sobraniie.Google Scholar
Andreeva, Natalia S. 2001. “Pribaltiyskiye gubernii v administrativnoi sisteme Rossiiskoy imperii nachala XX v.” In Prostranstvo vlasti: istoricheskiy opyt Rossii i vyzovy sovremennosti [The Space of Power: The Historical Experience of Russia and the Challenges of Contemporaneity], edited by Anan’ich, Boris and Barzilov, Sergei, 217234. Moscow: MONF.Google Scholar
Bakhturina, Aleksandra Yu. 2004. Okrainy Rossiiskoy imperii: Gosudarstvennoye upravleniye i natsionalnaya politika v gody Pervoy mirivoy voyny (1914–1917 gg.) [The Margins of the Russian Empire: State Administration and Nationalities Policy in the Years of the First World War (1914–1917)]. Moscow: ROSSPEN.Google Scholar
Bauer, Otto. 2000. The Question of Nationalities and Social Democracy. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Blitstein, Peter A. 2006a. “Cultural Diversity and the Interwar Conjuncture: Soviet Nationality Policy in Its Comparative Context.” Slavic Review 65 (2): 273293.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blitstein, Peter A. 2006b. “Nation and Empire in Soviet History, 1917–1953.” Ab Imperio no. 1:197219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bobrovnikov, Vladimir O. 2001. “Voenno-narodnoye upravleniye na Severnom Kavkaze (Dagestan): musulmanskaya periferiya v imperskom prostranstve XIX-XX vv” [Military-Popular Government at the North Caucasus (Dagestan): A Moslem Periphery in the Russian Imperial Space of the XIX–XX Centuries]. In Prostranstvo vlasti: Istoricheskiy opyt Rossii i vyzovy sovremennosti [The Space of Power: The Historical Experience of Russia and the Challenges of Contemporaneity], edited by Anan’ich, Boris and Barzilov, Sergei, 372390. Moscow: MONF.Google Scholar
Bowring, Bill. 2005. “Burial and Resurrection: Karl Renner’s Controversial Influence on the ‘National Question’ in Russia.” In National-Cultural Autonomy and Its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim, 162175. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bowring, Bill. 2015. “From Empire to Multilateral Player: The Deep Roots of Autonomy in Russia.” In Minority Accommodation through Territorial and Non-Territorial Autonomy, edited by Malloy, Tove and Palermo, Francesco, 133157. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bromlei, Iulian V., ed. 1989. Chto delat’? V poiskah idey sovershenstvovaniya mezhnatsional’nyh otnosheniy v SSSR [What to Do? In Search of the Ideas for the Improvement of Interethnic Relations in the USSR]. Moscow: INION RAN SSSR.Google Scholar
Brown, Kate. 2004. A Biography of No Place: From Ethnic Borderland to Soviet Heartland. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers. 1996. Nationalism Reframed: Nationhood and the National Question in the New Europe. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brubaker, Rogers. 2004. Ethnicity without Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunner, Georg and Küpper, Herbert. 2002. “European Options of Autonomy: A Typology of Autonomy Models of Minority Self-Governance.: In Minority Governance in Europe, edited by Gal, Kinga, 1336. Budapest: LGI.Google Scholar
Brunsson, Nils. 1989. The Organization of Hypocrisy: Talk, Decisions and Actions in Organizations. Chichester, NY: John Wiley & Sons Google Scholar
Burbank, Jane. 2006. “An Imperial Rights Regime: Law and Citizenship in the Russian Empire.” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 7 (6): 397431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burbank, Jane. 2018. “Empire and Transformation: The Politics of Difference.” In Comparing Modern Empires: Imperial Rule and Decolonization in the Changing World Order, edited by Tomohiko, Uyama, 1133. Sapporo: Slavic-Eurasian Research Center.Google Scholar
Burbank, Jane, and Cooper, Frederick. 2010. Empires in World History: Power and the Politics of Difference. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Cadiot, Juliette, 2005. “Searching for Nationality: Statistics and National Categories at the End of the Russian Empire (1897–1917).” Russian Review 64 (3): 440455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell (Vorob’eva), Elena. 2001. “‘Iedinaia i nedelimaia Rossiia’ i ‘inorodcheskii vopros’ v imperskoi ideologii samoderzhaviia” [“United and Indivisible Russia” and the “aliens question” in the Imperial Ideology of Autocracy]. In Prostranstvo vlasti: Istoricheskii opyt Rossii i vyzovy sovremennosti [The Space of Power: The Historical Experience of Russia and the Challenges of Contemporaneity], edited by Anan’ich, Boris and Barzilov, Sergei, 204216. Moscow: MONF.Google Scholar
Carrère d’Encausse, Hélène. 1992. The Great Challenge: Nationalities and the Bolshevik State, 1917–1930. Translated by Festinger, Nancy. New York: Holmes & Meier.Google Scholar
Castoriadis, Cornelius. 1987. The Imaginary Institution of Society. Translated by Blarney, Kathleen. Malden, MA: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Chebotareva, Valentina G. 2008. Natsional’naya politika Rossiiskoi Federatsii, 1925–1938 gg. [The Nationalities Policy of the Russian Federation]. Moscow: Moskovskii Dom natsional’nostei.Google Scholar
Cherniak, Eduard, ed. 1998. Kul’turno-natsional’naia avtonomiia v istorii Rossii. Dokumental’naia antologiia [Cultural-National Autonomy in the History of Russia: A Documentary Anthology]. 2 vols. Tomsk: Publishing House of the Tomsk University.Google Scholar
Chernov, Mikhail. 1984. Razrabotka V. I. Leninym teorii i programmy bol’shevistskoi partii po natsional’nomu voprosu [The Elaboration of the Theory and Program of the Bolshevik Party by V. I. Lenin]. Moscow: Vysshaia Shkola.Google Scholar
Chistiakov, Oleg I. 2003. Stanovleniye “Rossiiskoi Federatsii” (1917–1922) [The Formation of the “Russian Federation” (1917–1922)]. 2nd ed. Moscow: Zertsalo-M.Google Scholar
Coakley, John. 2016. “Introduction: Dispersed Minorities and Non-Territorial Autonomy.” Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crews, Robert. 2009. For Prophet and Tsar: Islam and Empire in Russia and Central Asia. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Dameshek, Lev, and Remnev, Anatolii, eds. 2007. Sibir’ v sostave Rossiiskoy Imperii [Siberia within the Russian Empire]. Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie.Google Scholar
Deklaratsiia Sfatul Ţării: 2(15) Dekabria 1917” [Sfatul Ţării’s Declaration: December 2 (15), 1917]. In Sovetsko-Rumynskie otnosheniya, 1917–1941: Dokumenty i materialy v 2 t. [The Soviet-Romanian Relations, 1917–1941: Documents and Materials in Two Volumes], edited by Avdeev, Alexander, Ungureanu, Mihai-Răzvan et al. Vol. I. 19171934, 8-10. Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye Otnosheniya, 2000.Google Scholar
Dekrety Sovetskoi Vlasti. 25 oktiabria 1917 – 16 marta 1918 [The Decrees of the Soviet Power. 25 October 1917 – 16 March 1918] Vol.1 of. Dekrety Sovetskoi Vlasti [The Decrees of the Soviet Power]. Moscow: Gosudarstvennoe Izdatelstvo Politicheskoi Literatury, 1957.Google Scholar
Diakin, Valentin. 1998. Natsional’nyi vopros vo vnutrennei politike tsarizma (XIX–nachalo XX vv.) [Nationalities Question in the Domestic Policy of the Tsarism (XIX–early XX Centuries)]. St. Petersburg: LISS.Google Scholar
Dohrn, Verena. 2003. “State and Minorities: The First Lithuanian Republic and S. M. Dubnov’s Concept of Cultural Autonomy.” In The Vanished World of Lithuanian Jews, edited by Nikzentaitis, Alvydas, Schreiner, Stefan, and Staliunas, Darius, 155173. Amsterdam: Rodopi.Google Scholar
Dolbilov, Mikhail. 2010. Russikii krai, chuzhaia vera: Etnokofessionalnaia politika imperii v Litve i Belorussii pri Aleksandre II [Russian Area, Alien Faith: Ethnoconfessional Policy of the Empire in Lithiuania and Belorussia under Alexander II]. Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie.Google Scholar
Dolbilov, Mikhail, Miller, Alexei, Berezhnaya, Liliya, Budnitskii, Oleg, Makushin, Alexander, Pravilova, Ekaterina, Tsiunchuk, Rustem, et al. 2006. Zapadnye okrainy Rossiskoi Imperii [The Western Margins of the Russian Empire]. Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie.Google Scholar
Donninghaus, Viktor. 2011. V teni “Bolshogo Brata”: Zapadnye natsional’nye men’shinstva v SSSR, 1917–1938 gg. [In the “Big Brother’s” Shadow: The Western National Minorities in the USSR, 1917–1938]. Moscow: ROSSPEN.Google Scholar
Drobizheva, Leokadiia. 2003. Sotsial’nye problemy mezhnatsiaonal’nykh otnoshenii v postsovetskoi Rossii. [The Social Problems of Interethnic Relations in Post-Soviet Russia]. Moscow: Tsentr Obshechelovecheskikh Tsennostei.Google Scholar
Eide, Asbjørn, Greni, Vibeke, and Lundberg, Maria. 1998. “Cultural Autonomy: Concept, Content, History and Role in the World Order.” In Autonomy: Applications and Implications, edited by Suksi, Markku, 251276. The Hague: Kluwer Law International.Google Scholar
Fleischhauer, Ingeborg. 1981. “The Nationalities Policy of the Tsars Reconsidered: The Case of the Russian Germans.” The Journal of Modern History 53 (1): 10651090 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foucault, Michel. 1982. “The Subject and Power.” Critical Inquiry 8 (4): 777795.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foucault, Michel. 2009. “Lecture Four: 1 February 1978.” In Foucault, Michel. Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the College De France, 1977–78, edited by Senellart, Michel. Translated by Burchell, Graham, 87114. Houndmills, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Frankel, Jonathan. 1990. The Dilemmas of Jewish National Autonomism: The Case of Ukraine 1917–1920. Ukrainian-Jewish Relations in Historical Perspective, edited by Aster, Howard, and Potichnyj, Peter J.. 2nd edition, 263279. Edmonton: Institute of Ukrainian Studies Press.Google Scholar
Gerasimov, Il’ia. 2017. “The Great Imperial Revolution.” Ab Imperio 2:2144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
German, Arkady. 2007. Nemetskaya avtonomiya na Volge: 1918–1941. [The German Autonomy on the Volga: 1918–1941]. Moscow: MSNK-Press.Google Scholar
Ghai, Yash. 2005. “Autonomy as a Participatory Right in the Modern Democratic State: Public Participation, Autonomy and Minorities.” In Beyond a One-Dimensional State: an Emerging Right to Autonomy?, edited by Zelim Skurbaty, 345. Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.Google Scholar
Gitelman, Zvi. 1972. Jewish Nationality and Soviet Politics: The Jewish Section of the CPSU. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Glebov, Sergey. 2009. “Siberian Middle Ground: Languages of Rule and Accommodation on the Siberian Frontier.” In Empire Speaks Out: Languages of Rationalization and Self-Description in the Russian Empire, edited by Gerasimov, Ilya, Kusber, Jan, and Semyonov, Alexander, 121151. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Goldelman, Solomon I. 1968. Jewish National Autonomy in Ukraine: 1917–1920. Translated by Luchkovich, Michael. Chicago, IL: Ukrainian Research and Information Institute.Google Scholar
Gorizontov, Leonid. 1999. Paradoksy imperskoi politiki: poliaki v Rossii i russkie v Pol’she [The Paradoxes of Imperial Policy: Poles in Russia and Russian in Poland]. Moscow: Indrik.Google Scholar
Guboglo, Mikhail, and Chervonnaya, Svetlana. 1992. Istoriya . Problemy. Perspektivy. [History. Problems. Perspectives] Vol.I of Krymskotatarskoye natsionalnoye dvizheniye [The Crimean Tatar National Movement]. Moscow: TsIMO.Google Scholar
Hirsch, Francine. 2005. Empire of Nations: Ethnographic Knowledge and the Making of the Soviet Union. Ithaca, NY; London: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Holquist, Peter. 2001. “To Count, to Extract, to Exterminate: Population Statistics and Population Politics in Late Imperial and Soviet Russia.” In A State of Nations: Empire and Nation-Making in the Age of Lenin and Stalin, edited by Suny, Ronald Grigor and Martin, Terry, 111144. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ivanov, Vitalii, and Klementiev, Vladimir. 2010. Obrazovaniye Chuvashskoi avtonomii. Predposylki, proekty, etapy [The Emergence of the Chuvash Autonomy: Prerequisites, Projects, Stages]. Cheboksary: Chuvashskoye Knizhnoye Izdatelstvo.Google Scholar
Jersild, Austin Lee. 1997. “From Savagery to Citizenship: Caucasian Mountaineers and Muslims in the Russian Empire.” In Russia’s Orient: Imperial Borderlands and Peoples, 1700–1917, edited by Brower, Daniel R. and Lazzerini, Edward J., 101114. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Kandel’, Felix. 2014. Evrei Rossii: Vremena i Sobytiia. Istoriia evreev Rossiiskoi Imperii [The Jews of Russia: Times and Events; A History of the Jews of the Russian Empire]. Moscow: Mosty Kul’tury; Jerusalem: Gesharim.Google Scholar
Kappeler, Andreas. 2007. “Tsentr i elity periferii v Habsburgskoi, Rossiyskoi i Osmanskoy imperiiah (1700–1918 gg.)” [The Centre and Elites of the Peripheries in the Habsburg, Russian and Ottoman Empires (1700–1918)]. Ab Imperio no. 2: 1758.Google Scholar
Karnishina, Natalia. 2011. “Traktovka federalizma i avtonomii v trudakh russkikh konstitutsionalistov i kontse XIX - nachale XX vv” [The Interpretations of Federalism and Autonomy in the Works of Russian Constitutionalists at the End of the 19th – Beginning of the 20th Century]. Istoricheskie, filosofskie, politicheskie i iuridicheskie nauki, kul′turologiiia i iskusstvovedenie: Voprosy teorii i praktiki 4–2 (10): 7881.Google Scholar
Khabrieva, Taleia. 2003. Natsional’no-culturnaia avtonomiia v Rossiiskoi Federatsii. [National Cultural Autonomy in the Russian Federation]. Moscow: Publishing House Justitsinform.Google Scholar
Khabutdinov, Aidar. 2010. “Tri formy avtonomii musul’man Volgo-Ural’skogo regiona: religioznaia, natsional’no-kulturnaia, territorial’naia (konets XVIII – nachalo XXI v.)” [The Three Forms of Autonomy for Muslims in the Volga-Ural Region: Religious, National-Cultural and Territorial (the End of the 18th – the Beginning of the 21st Centuries]. Pax Islamica 3 (2): 160176.Google Scholar
Khoury, Dina Rizk, and Glebov, Sergey. 2017. “Citizenship, Subjecthood, and Difference in the Late Ottoman and Russian Empires.” Ab Imperio no. 1:4558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khripachenko, Tatiana I. 2012. “Poniatiia federatsiia, detsentralizatsiia, avtonomiia v sotsialisticheskom i liberal’nom discursah Rossiiskoi Imperii (konets XIX – nachalo XX veka)” [The Concepts of Federation, Decentralization, and Autonomy in the Socialist and Liberal Discourses of the Russian Empire (the End of XIX – Beginning of XX Century). In “Poniatiia o Rossii”: Kluchevye obshestvenno-politicheskiie ponitiia Rossii imperskogo perioda [Notions of Russia: The Key Sociopolitical Concepts in Russia of the Imperial Period], edited by Miller, Alexei, Sdvizhkov, Denis, and Shierle, Ingrid, vol. 2, 99142. Moscow: Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie.Google Scholar
Kitchin, Robert M. 1994. “Cognitive Maps: What Are They and Why Study Them?Journal of Environmental Psychology 14 (1): 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, Nathaniel. 2000. “Ethnicity, Nationality, and the Masses: Narodnost´ and Modernity in Imperial Russia,” in Russian Modernity: Politics, Knowledge, Practices, edited by Hoffmann, David L. and Kotsonis, Yanni, 4164. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korkunov, Nikolai M. 1909. Russkoye gosudarstvennoe pravo [The Russian State Law], vol. 1. St. Petersburg: Publishing House of M. Stasiulevich.Google Scholar
Kutafin, Oleg. 2014. Rossiiskaya avtonomiya: Izbrannye trudy [Russian Autonomy: Selected Proceedings]. Vol. 5. Moscow: Prospekt.Google Scholar
L’vova, Elvira, Nam, Irina, and Naumova, Natalia. 1993. “Natsional’no-kulturnaia avtonomiia: Ideia i voplosheniie” [National-Cultural Autonomy: Idea and Implementation]. Polis 2:129135.Google Scholar
Lagerspetz, Mikko. 2014. “Cultural Autonomy of National Minorities in Estonia: The Erosion of a Promise.” Journal of Baltic Studies 45 (3): 457475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lazerson, Moisei. 1918. Natsional′nost′ i gosudarstvennyi stroi (Iuridiko-politicheskie ocherki) [Nationality and State Order]. Petrograd: Kniga.Google Scholar
Lefort, Claude. 1988. Democracy and Political Theory. Translated by Macey, David. Oxford: Polity Press.Google Scholar
Lenin, Vladimir I. 1970. “Zametki na soveshanii delegatov II Vserossiiskogo s’ezda kommunisticheskih organisatsii narodov Vostoka, 21 noyabrya 1919 goda” [Notes from the Delegates’ Meeting of the II All-Russian Congress of the Peoples’ of the East Communist Organizations]. In Polnoe Sobranie Sochinenii, vol. 39, edited by Sharapov, Yuri, 462463. 5th ed. Moscow: Institut Marksizma-Leninizma.Google Scholar
Leonov, Sergei. 1997. Rozhdeniye Sovetskoy imperii: Gosudarstvo i ideologiya, 1917–1922 [The Birth of the Soviet Empire: State and Ideology, 1917–1922]. Moscow: Dialog-MGU.Google Scholar
Levin, Iosif. 1948. Suverenitet [Sovereignty]. Moscow: Yuridiceskoye Izdatel’stvo.Google Scholar
Liber, George. 1987. “Ukrainian Nationalism and the 1918 Law on National-Personal Autonomy.” Nationalities Papers 15 (1): 2242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lotkin, Il’ia. 2006. Pribaltiiskie diaspory v Sibiri (1920–1930–ye gg.): Aspekty etnosotsialnoi istorii [The Baltic Diasporas in Siberia (the 1920–1930s): Aspects of the Ethno-Social History]. Omsk: ID “Nauka”.Google Scholar
Lysenko, Yulia A., Barmin, Valerii A., Anisimova, Inna V., Bochkareva, Irina B., and Tarasova, Elena V.. 2017. Ethnopoliticheskiie protsessy v tsentral’noaziatskih okrainah v period revolutsii 1917 g. [Ethnopolitical Processes in the Central Asian Margins of the Russian Empire in the Period of the 1917 Revolutions]. Barnaul: Publishing House of the Altai University.Google Scholar
Malloy, Tove H., and Salat, Levente. 2020. Non-Territorial Autonomy and Decentralization. Ethno-Cultural Diversity Governance. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malloy, Tove H., Osipov, Alexander, and Vizi, Balazs, eds. 2015. Managing Diversity through Non-Territorial Autonomy: Assessing Advantages, Deficiencies, and Risks. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meyer, John W., and Rowan, Brian. 1977. “Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony.” The American Journal of Sociology 83 (2): 340363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikhailov, Viacheslav, ed. 1997. National’naia politika Rossii: Istoriya i sobremennost’ [The Nationalities Policy of Russia: History and Contemporaneity]. Moscow: Russkii Mir.Google Scholar
Miller, Alexei. 2004. “The Empire and the Nation in the Imagination of Russian Nationalism.” In Rule, Imperial, edited by Miller, Alexei and Rieber, Alfred J., 926. Budapest: Central European University Press.Google Scholar
Miller, Alexei. 2008. The Romanov Empire and Nationalism: Essays in the Methodology of Historical Research. Budapest: Central European University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mineeva, Elena K. 2009. Stanovlenie Mariiskoi, Mordovskoi i Chuvashskoi ASSR kak national’no-territorial’nyh avtonomii (1920–1930-e gody) [The Formation of the Marii, Mordva and Chuvash ASSR as National-Territorial Autonomies (the 1920s - 1930s)]. Cheboksary: Izdatelstvo Chuvashskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta.Google Scholar
Montgomery, Robert W. 2011. “Buriat Political and Social Activism in the 1905 Revolution.” Sibirica 10 (3): 128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrison, Alexander. 2012. “Metropole, Colony, and Imperial Citizenship in the Russian Empire.” Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 13 (2): 327364.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Musaev, Vadim. 2004. “Kul’turnaya avtonomiya kak sredstvo razresheniya natsional’nyh problem: Istoriya i perspektivy” [Cultural Autonomy as a Remedy to Resolve Nationalities Problems: History and Perspectives]. In Perekrestok kul’tur: Mezhdisciplinarnye issledovaniya v oblasti gumanitarnyh nauk [The Crossroads of Cultures: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Area of Humanities], 83107. Moscow: Logos.Google Scholar
Nam, Irina. 2009. Natsional’nye men’shinstva Sibiri i Dal’nego Vostoka na istoricheskom perelome (1917–1922 gg.) [The National Minorities of Siberia and the Far East at the Historic Turning Point (1917–1922)]. Tomsk: Publishing House of the Tomsk University.Google Scholar
Nam, Irina, ed. 2016. Natsional′nyi vopros v programmnykh dokumentakh politicheskikh partii, organizatsii i dvizhenii Rossii: Nachalo XX v.; Dokumenty i materialy [Nationalities Question in the Programmatic Documents of the Political Parties, Organizations and Movements of Russia: The Beginning of the 20th Century; Documents and Materials]. Tomsk: Publishing House of the Tomsk University.Google Scholar
Nathans, Benjamin. 2002. Beyond the Pale: The Jewish Encounter with Late Imperial Russia. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Natsional’naia politika partii v sovremennykh usloviiakh (platforma KPSS): Priniata Plenumom TsK KPSS 20 sentiabria 1989 goda” [The Nationalities Policy of the Party in Modern Conditions (The CPSU Platform): Adopted by the CSPU Central Committee Plenum on September 20, 1989]. In Materialy Plenuma Tsentral’nogo Komiteta KPSS, 19–20 September 1989 [The Materials of the CSPU Central Committee Plenum, September 19–20, 1989], 212235. Moscow, Politizdat.Google Scholar
Nimni, Ephraim. 2005. “Introduction: National-Cultural Autonomy Revisited.” In National-Cultural Autonomy and Its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim, 112. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nimni, Ephraim. 2007. “National–Cultural Autonomy as an Alternative to Minority Territorial Nationalism.” Ethnopolitics 6 (3): 345364.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nimni, Ephraim. 2013. “The Conceptual Challenge of Non-Territorial Autonomy.” In The Challenge of Non-Territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice, edited by Nimni, Ephraim, Osipov, Alexander, and Smith, David. J., 124. Oxford: Peter Lang.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osipov, Aleksandr. 2004. Natsional’no-kulturnaia avtonomiia: idei, resheniia, instituty [National-Cultural Autonomy: Ideas, Decisions, Institutions]. St. Petersburg: Centre for Independent Social Research.Google Scholar
Osipov, Alexander. 2011. “The ‘Peoples’ Congresses’ in Russia: Failure or Success? Authenticity and Efficiency of Minority Representation.” ECMI working paper no. 48. https://www.ecmi.de/fileadmin/redakteure/publications/pdf/Working_Paper_48_Final.pdf. (Accessed November 20, 2020.)Google Scholar
Osipov, Alexander. 2013. “Non-Territorial Autonomy during and after Communism: In the Wrong or Right Place?Journal on Ethnopolitics and Minority Issues in Europe 12 (1): 726.Google Scholar
Osipov, Alexander. 2018. “Can ‘Non-Territorial Autonomy’ Serve as an Analytical Term? Between ‘Thick’ and ‘Thin’ Approaches.” International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 25 (4): 621646.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
“Osnovnoi Zakon (Konstitutsiia) Dal’nevostochnoi Respubliki” [Basic Law (Constitution) of the Far Eastern Republic]. 1998. In Kul’turno-natsional’naia avtonomiia v istorii Rossii: Dokumental’naia antologiia [Cultural-National Autonomy in the History of Russia: A Documentary Anthology], edited by Cherniak, Eduard. 2931. Vol. 2. Tomsk: Publishing House of the Tomsk University.Google Scholar
Pearson, Raymond. 1991. “The Historic Background to Soviet Federalism.” In Soviet Federalism: Nationalism and Economic Decentralization, edited by McAuley, Alastair, 1332. Leicester: Leicester University Press.Google Scholar
Pierre-Caps, Stephane. 2004. “The Principle of Personal Autonomy: A Solution for the Future?” In The Politics of Belonging: Nationalism, Liberalism and Pluralism, edited by Dieckhoff, Alain, 259282. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Pinkus, Benjamin. 1988. The Jews of the Soviet Union: The History of a National Minority. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poleshchuk, Vadim. 2013. “Changes in the Concept of National Cultural Autonomy in Estonia.” In The Challenge of Non-Territorial Autonomy: Theory and Practice, edited by Nimni, Ephraim, Osipov, Alexander, and Smith, David. J., 149162. Oxford: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Popov, Gavriil, and Adzhubei, Nikita. 1988. “Pam’iat’ i Pam’iat’.” Znam’a 1:188203.Google Scholar
Porfir’ev, Andrei I. 2009. Natsional’nyi suverenitet v pravovoi prirode rossiiskogo federalisma [National Sovereignty in the Legal Essence of the Russian Federalism]. Moscow: Knigodel.Google Scholar
Prina, Federica. 2020a. “The Mechanics of Consensus: Nonterritorial Cultural Autonomy and the Russian State.” Nationalities Papers 48 (2): 307322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prina, Federica 2020b. “Nonterritorial Autonomy and Minority (Dis)Empowerment: Past, Present, and Future.” Nationalities Papers 48 (3): 425434.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Programma Kommunisticheskoy Partii Soberskogo Soyuza , 1961 g. [The Program of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, 1961]. Moscow: Gospolitizdat.Google Scholar
Raffass, Tania. 2012. The Soviet Union: Federation or Empire? London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Renner, Karl. 2005. “State and Nation.” In National Cultural Autonomy and Its Contemporary Critics, edited by Nimni, Ephraim, 1547. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Rezolutsiia XXVIIII Syezda KPSS: Demokratiheskaya natsionalnaya politika – put’ k dobrovolnomu souyuzu, miru i soglasiyu mezhdu narodami.1990. [Resolution of the 28th CPSU Congress: Democratic Nationalities Policy – A Way to a Voluntary Union, Peace, and Accord among Peoples]. In Materialy XXVIIII Syezda Kommunisticheskoy Partii Sovetskogo Soyuza [Materials of the XXVIII Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union], 168172. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo politicheskoi literatury.Google Scholar
Rich, David. 1996. “Imperialism, Reform and Strategy: Russian Military Statistics, 1840–1880.” Slavonic and East European Review 74 (4): 621639.Google Scholar
Rieber, Alfred J. 1989. “The Sedimentary Society.” Russian History 16 (1): 353376.Google Scholar
Sablin, Ivan. 2016. Governing Post-Imperial Siberia and Mongolia, 1911–1924. New York: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sablin, Ivan. 2019. The Rise and Fall of Russia’s Far Eastern Republic, 1905–1922: Nationalisms, Imperialisms, and Regionalisms in and after the Russian Empire. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Saleniece, Irena, and Kuznetsovs, Sergei. 1999. “Nationality Policy, Education and the Russian Question in Latvia since 1918.” In Ethnicity and Nationalism in Russia: The CIS and the Baltic States, edited by Williams, Christopher and Sfikas, Thanasis D., 236264. Aldershot: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Saveliev, Viktor. 2010. “Natsional’no-kulturnaia politika kak rossiiskaia real’nost’” [National-Cultural Policy as the Russian Reality]. Upravlencheskoe konsultirovanie: Aktual’nye problem gosudarstvennogo i munitsipal’nogo upravleniia 3:157168.Google Scholar
Shevtsov, Viktor S. 1978. Natsionalnyi suverenitet: Problemy teorii i metodologii [National Sovereignty: Problems of Theory and Methodology]. Moscow: Iuridicheskaia Literatura.Google Scholar
Shternberg, Lev. 1910. “Inorodtsy: Obshchii obzor” [Inorodtsy: A General Overview]. In Formy natsional’nogo dvizheniia v sovremennykh gosudarstvakh: Avstro-Vengriia, Rossiia, Germaniia [The Forms of National Movements in Modern Countries: Austro-Hungary, Russia, Germany], edited by. Kastelianskii, A. I., 529574. St. Petersburg: Obshestvennaia Pol’za.Google Scholar
Simonsen, Sven Gunnar. 1999. “Inheriting the Soviet Policy Toolbox: Russia’ s Dilemma over Ascriptive Nationality.” Europe-Asia Studies 51 (6): 10691087.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Slezkine, Yuri. 1994a. Arctic Mirrors: Russia and the Small Peoples of the North. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Slezkine, Yuri. 1994b. “The USSR as a Communal Apartment, or How a Socialist State Promoted Ethnic Particularism.” Slavic Review 53 (2): 414452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slocum, John W. 1998. ‘Who, and When, Were the Inorodtsy? The Evolution of the Category of ‘Aliens’ in Imperial Russia.” Russian Review 57 (2): 173190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, David. J. 2005. “Non-Territorial Cultural Autonomy as a Baltic Contribution to Europe between the Wars.” In The Baltic States and their Region: New Europe or Old?, edited by Smith, David J., 209224. Amsterdam: Rodopi.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smith, David J. 2010. “Inter-war War Multiculturalism Revisited: Cultural Autonomy in 1920s Latvia.” In From Recognition to Restoration. Latvia’s History as a Nation-State, edited by Smith, David J., Galbreath, David J., and Swain, Geoffrey, 3143. Amsterdam: Rodopi.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, David J. 2011. “National Cultural Autonomy.” In Routledge Handbook of Ethnic Conflict, edited by Cordell, Karl and Wolff, Stefan, 278287. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Smith, David J. 2016. “Estonia: A Model for Inter-War Europe?Ethnopolitics 15 (1): 89104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steinwedel, Charles. 2000. “To Make a Difference: The Construction of a Category of Ethnicity in Late Imperial Russia.” In Russian Modernity: Politics, Practices, Knowledge, edited by Kotsonis, Yanni and Hoffman, David, 6786. Houndmills, UK: Macmillan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steinwedel, Charles. 2016. Threads of Empire: Loyalty and Tsarist Authority in Bashkiria, 1552–1917. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Sudnitsin, Yuri. 1958. Natsional’nyi suverenitet v SSSR [Nationalities Sovereignty in the USSR]. Moscow: Gosyurizdat.Google Scholar
Suny, Ronald. 1993. The Revenge of the Past: Nationalism, Revolution, and the Collapse of the Soviet Union. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tadevosian, Eduard V. 1970. V. I. Lenin o gosudarstvennyh formah resheniya natsional’nogo voprosa v SSSR [V. I. Lenin about the State Forms of the Resolution of Nationalities Question in the USSR]. Moscow: Izdatel’stvo Moskovskogo Universiteta.Google Scholar
Tolman, Edward C. 1948. “Cognitive Maps in Rats and Men.” Psychological Review 55 (4): 189208.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tolz, Vera. 2001. Inventing the Nation: Russia . London: Arnold; New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Tolz, Vera. 2005. “Orientalism, Nationalism, and Ethnic Diversity in Late Imperial Russia.” The Historical Journal 48 (1): 127150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tolz, Vera. 2019. “Constructing Race, Ethnicity, and Nationhood in Imperial Russia: Issues and Misconceptions.” In Ideologies of Race: Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union in Global Context, edited by Rainbow, David, 2958. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Uyama, Tomohiko. 2007. “A Particularist Empire: The Russian Policies of Christianization and Military Conscription.” In Central Asia, Empire, Islam, and Politics in Central Eurasia, edited by Uyama, Tomohiko, 2363. Sapporo: Slavic Research Center.Google Scholar
Weeks, Theodore R. 1994. “Nationality and Municipality: Reforming City Government in the Kingdom of Poland, 1904–1915.” Russian History 21 (1–4): 2347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weeks, Theodore R. 1996. Nation and State in Late Imperial Russia: Nationalism and Russification on the Western Frontier, 1863–1914. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press.Google Scholar
Werth, Paul. 2006. “Imperial Russia and the Armenian Catholicos at Home and Abroad.” In Reconstruction and Interaction of Slavic Eurasia and Its Neighboring Worlds, edited by Ieda, Osamu and Uyama, Tomohiko, 203235. Sapporo: Slavic Research Center.Google Scholar
Werth, Paul. 2014. The Tsar’s Foreign Faiths: Toleration and the Fate of Religious Freedom in Imperial Russia. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolff, Larry. 1994. Inventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization on the Mind of the Enlightenment. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Yaroshevski, Dov. 1997. “Empire and Citizenship.” In Russia’s Orient: Imperial Borderlands and Peoples, 1700–1917, edited by Brower, Daniel R. and Lazzerini, Edward J., 5879. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Yupsanis, Athanasios. 2017. “Cultural Autonomy for Minorities in the Baltic States, Ukraine, and the Russian Federation: A Dead Letter.” Vol. 36 of Polish Yearbook of International Law 2016, 109135. Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Scholar.Google Scholar
SSSR, Zakon “O svobodnom natsional′nom razvitii grazhdan SSSR, prozhivaiushchikh za predelami svoikh natsional′no-gosudarstvennykh obrazovanii ili ne imeiushchikh ikh na territorii SSSR.” No. 1452-I ot 26.04.1990 [The USSR Law “On free national development of the USSR citizens residing outside of their national-territorial units or not having such in the USSR” No. 1452-I of April 26, 1990]. http://www.consultant.ru/cons/cgi/online.cgi?req=doc&base=ESU&n=58#02499404353117578. (Accessed April 7, 2021.)Google Scholar
Zorin, Vladimir. 2003. Natsional’naia Politika v Rossii: Istoriia, Problemy, Perspektiva [Nationalities Policy in Russia: History, Problems, Perspective]. Moscow: The Institute of Socio-Political Research, Russian Academy of Sciences.Google Scholar
Zubov, Andrei, and Salmin, Alexei. 1989. “Optimizatsiia natsional’no-gosudarstvennykh otnoshenii v usloviyah natsional’nogo vozrozhdeniia v SSSR” [The Optimization of National-State Relations during the Nationalities’ Revival in the USSR]. Rabochii Klass i Sovremenny Mir 3:6284.Google Scholar