E-Book-ProQuest / Fernzugriff nach Registrierung möglich
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Note on Transliteration, Translation, Images, and Names -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- 1 The Afterlife of Soviet Demography in the Discourse on the Demographic Crisis -- 2 How to Do Things with Demography -- 3 Demography-A New Vernacular for the State -- 4 Traditional Family Values: From Population as a Quantitative Problem to Population as a Moral Concern -- 5 Marketized Pronatalism and Domestic Spaces of Care -- Conclusion: Caring Like a State in a Time of War -- Bibliography -- Index -- About the Author.
The post-Soviet Russian state is haunted by the fear of not having enough people.Despite its well-publicized pronatalist campaigns, declining birth rates and rising mortality rates since the 1990s, cast doubt on the state's ability to care for its population effectively.