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Session Submission Type: Panel
Infrastructures of Occupation I: spatialities & economies
How has russian & soviet power sought to entrench itself on territories which it has occupied or annexed? This panel series deploys “infrastructure” as a heuristic to encompass multiple tools and strategies–martial, architectural, technological, ecological, aesthetic, socio-cultural, demographic, eugenic, legal, fiscal, cadastral–put to use by russian coloniality on the lands of others. It seeks to catalogue, compare and comprehend the impacts these varied (re)colonial infrastructures exert on territories, populations and environments subjected to them (laid to waste, terraformed, de/re-populated, socially engineered, disfigured, “reconstructed”). Can we identify meaningful infrastructural specificities of russian, soviet and post-soviet coloniality–and of resistance to it–across spatial, temporal and systemic contexts?
In thinking (critically) about russia’s (re)coloniality, we encounter an unsettling contradiction: the extent to which post-soviet russia attempts to marry ideologies and technologies of revanchism and neo-imperialism with grotesque claims to de–coloniality and anti-imperialism. Is this dialectic between de- and re-colonality a stable feature of russian empire-building? How does this contradiction manifest itself not only ideologically, but also through the multiple infrastructures through which empire expands and contracts, subjugates–and succumbs to resistance.
*Note: russia is written with a small “r” above to signal an activist stance towards the illegitimacy of the present-day russian federation as a political entity; and to mark the commitment of participants to the dismantlement of its infrastructures of violence and subjugation.
This panel belongs to a double series: "Infrastructures of Occupation" and "Infrastructures of Liberation"
russia’s* Property Regimes as a Spatial Technology of Occupation - Vera Smirnova, Kansas State U
From Migrants to Settlers: A Study of *russian Rural Development at the Borderlands - Ecem Saricayir, University of California, Santa Cruz
Chersonesos: Governing the '*russian World' through Reconstruction and Blagoustroystvo - Aleksandra Simonova, Brown U
Dark Reconstruction, or russian* Worlding: Architecture-after-Urbicide in Ukraine, Chechnya, and Syria - Michał Murawski, U College London (UK)