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Dive into the research topics where Florian Stammler is active.

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Featured researches published by Florian Stammler.


Polar Research | 2009

Arctic climate change discourse: the contrasting politics of research agendas in the West and Russia

Bruce C. Forbes; Florian Stammler

In this paper we explore howWestern scientific concepts and attitudes towards indigenous knowledge, as they pertain to resource management and climate change, differ from the prevailing view in modern Russia. Western indigenous leaders representing the Inuit and Saami peoples are actively engaged in the academic and political discourse surrounding climate change, whereas their Russian colleagues tend to focus more on legislation and self-determination, as a post-Soviet legacy. We contribute to the debate with data from the Nenets tundra, showing how different research has employed the three crucial Western research paradigms of climate change, wildlife management and indigenous knowledge on the ground. We suggest that the daily practice of tundra nomadism involves permanent processes of negotiating one’s position in a changing environment, which is why “adaptation” is woven into the society, and cosmology as a whole, rather than being separable into distinct “bodies” of knowledge or Western-designed categories. We argue that research agendas should be placed in their proper local and regional context, and temporal framework: for example, by collaborating with herders on the topics of weather instead of climate change, herding skills instead of wildlife management, and ways of engaging with the tundra instead of traditional ecological knowledge.


Ecological Applications | 2010

Detection of snow surface thawing and refreezing in the Eurasian Arctic with QuikSCAT: implications for reindeer herding.

Annett Bartsch; Timo Kumpula; Bruce C. Forbes; Florian Stammler

Snow conditions play an important role for reindeer herding. In particular, the formation of ice crusts after rain-on-snow (ROS) events or general surface thawing with subsequent refreezing impedes foraging. Such events can be monitored using satellite data. A monitoring scheme has been developed for observation at the circumpolar scale based on data from the active microwave sensor SeaWinds on QuikSCAT (Ku-band), which is sensitive to changes on the snow surface. Ground observations on Yamal Peninsula were used for algorithm development. Snow refreezing patterns are presented for northern Eurasia above 60 degrees N from autumn 2001 to spring 2008. Western Siberia is more affected than Central and Eastern Siberia in accordance with climate data, and most events occur in November and April. Ice layers in late winter have an especially negative effect on reindeer as they are already weakened. Yamal Peninsula is located within a transition zone between high and low frequency of events. Refreezing was observed more than once a winter across the entire peninsula during recent years. The southern part experienced refreezing events on average four times each winter. Currently, herders can migrate laterally or north-south, depending on where and when a given event occurs. However, formation of ice crusts in the northern part of the peninsula may become as common as they are now in the southern part. Such a development would further constrain the possibility to migrate on the peninsula.


Sibirica | 2006

Dialogue for Development: An Exploration of Relations between Oil and Gas Companies, Communities, and the State

Florian Stammler; Emma Wilson

This introduction provides an overview of academic re- search and current practice relating to stakeholder dialogue around oil and gas development in the Russian North, Siberia and the Russian Far East. We discuss the two main strands of analysis in this special issue: (a) regulation and impact assessment; and (b) relationship- building in practice, with a particular focus on indigenous commu- nities. We argue that an effective regulatory framework, meaningful dialogue, and imaginative organization of stakeholder relations are required to minimize negative impacts and maximize benefits from oil and gas projects. Self-interest, mistrust, and a lack of collective agency frequently lead to ineffective planning and heightened ten- sions in relations. We identify lessons to be learned from partner- ships and initiatives already established in Sakhalin and Western Siberia, despite the lack of a stable legal framework to govern rela- tions. This issue focuses on the academic-practitioner interface, em- phasizing the importance of practical application of academic research and the value of non-academic contributions to academic debates.


Europe-Asia Studies | 2008

Building a ‘culture of dialogue’ among stakeholders in North-West Russian oil extraction

Florian Stammler; Vladislav Peskov

Abstract This article analyses the development of relations between indigenous communities, oil companies and the state in Russias Nenets Autonomous Okrug (NAO). Using first hand information from anthropological fieldwork and one co-authors own involvement in regional politics, we analyse efforts to establish stakeholder dialogue. We show that ‘collective agency’ is crucial to prepare the ground for trustful relations, whereas high personnel turnover within interest groups jeopardises initially promising initiatives. Lessons from this experience have relevance for similar analyses throughout Russia in those cases where consistent federal and regional legislation is not likely to be in place in the near future.


Polar Record | 2015

Dachas on permafrost: the creation of nature among Arctic Russian city-dwellers

Florian Stammler; Lena Sidorova

This article analyses the phenomenon of the post-Soviet Russian summer cottage, dacha, in the Arctic. We take an ethnographic comparative perspective for contributing to the refinement of our understanding of human-environment relations and urban anthropology of incomer-northerners, those with roots somewhere outside the north. Evidence from fieldwork in Murmansk Oblast, West Siberia and Sakha-Yakutia shows how for a socialist and post-socialist northern urban livelihood, the dacha has become an indispensable counterpart of life in the urban concrete housing blocks for most Russian northern inhabitants. We explore in this article the importance of dacha for northern identity of urban dwellers, by analysing spheres of individual and collective agency, freedom, attachment to place and land. We conclude that the dacha movement has filled a gap that had been left open by Soviet Arctic urbanisation: a dacha has come to stand for a human-environment relationship that gradually re-introduces rurality to urban life in the Russian Arctic so permanently that dacha places start losing their seasonal character.


Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2011

Land use and land cover change in Arctic Russia: Ecological and social implications of industrial development

Timo Kumpula; Anu Pajunen; Elina Kaarlejärvi; Bruce C. Forbes; Florian Stammler


The Extractive Industries and Society | 2016

Beyond extractivism and alternative cosmologies: arctic communities and extractive industries in uncertain times

Emma Wilson; Florian Stammler


Arctic | 2010

Remote Sensing and Local Knowledge of Hydrocarbon Exploitation: The Case of Bovanenkovo, Yamal Peninsula, West Siberia, Russia

Timo Kumpula; Bruce C. Forbes; Florian Stammler


The Extractive Industries and Society | 2016

Confrontation, coexistence or co-ignorance? Negotiating human-resource relations in two Russian regions

Florian Stammler; Aitalina Ivanova


Energy research and social science | 2016

Localizing governance of systemic risks: A case study of the Power of Siberia pipeline in Russia

Roman Sidortsov; Aytalina Ivanova; Florian Stammler

Collaboration


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Emma Wilson

International Institute for Environment and Development

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Timo Kumpula

University of Eastern Finland

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Nina Messhtyb

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Aitalina Ivanova

North-Eastern Federal University

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Lena Sidorova

North-Eastern Federal University

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