41. Details in this and the next paragraph are taken from Clarke et al., “Russian Dacha.”
Fully compatible with Clarke’s conclusions is H.T. Seeth, S. Chachnov, A. Surinov,
and J. von Braun, “Russian Poverty: Muddling Through Economic Transition with Garden
Plots,”
42. Vagin, “Russkii provintsial’nyi gorod,” 55.
43. Simagin, “Ekonomiko-geograficheskie aspekty,” chap. 2.
44. For a definition of the Soviet city as an “entirely separate category of urban settlement,”
see R. A. French, “The Individuality of the Soviet City,” in
45. On the steady erosion of the greenbelt in the 1970s and 1980s, see Colton,
46. For an early example, see A. Neverov, “Chem pakhnet na Medvezh’ikh ozerakh?”
47. I am grateful to Rachael Mann for showing me her B.A. dissertation, “Moscow’s Suburbia or Exurbia?” (University of Glasgow, 1998), where these results are laid out. My own interviews and questionnaire results suggest a similarly mixed picture.
48. See J. Bater,
49. See Wegren,
50. O. Kostiukova, “Dachi sovetskikh pisatelei po-prezhnemu v tsene,”
51. D. Zhelobanov and A. Grigor’ev, “Dachniki i dachevladel’tsy ishchut drug druga bez
posrednikov,”
52. The statistical comparison is made in Struyk and Angelici, “Russian Dacha Phenomenon,” 247.
53. A. Aleksandrova, “Novoe dachnoe myshlenie,”
54. Struyk and Angelici, “Russian Dacha Phenomenon,” 243.
55. In 1999, for example, dacha designs were displayed at an exhibition in Saratov (a selection of the designs were posted at <http://www.expo.saratov.ru/rism>).
56. On abandoned plots in Leningrad oblast, see R. Maidachenko, “Est’ svobodnye uchastki,”
57. Vagin, “Russkii provintsial’nyi gorod,” 75–76.
58. Struyk and Angelici, “Russian Dacha Phenomenon,” 240.
59. Nikiforova, “Mesto pod solntsem,” 2.
60. “Iuridicheskaia konsul’tatsiia,”
61. “Voina na ogorodakh,”
62. Vera Popova, “Zona vne zakona,”
63. “Ob osnovakh federal’noi zhilishchnoi sfery” (24 Dec. 1992), sec. 2, art. 9, in
64. A. Litvinov, “Kommunalki na bolote,”