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Kazakhstan (Bradt Travel Guide)

Kazakhstan (Bradt Travel Guide)
By Paul Brummell

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Product Description

Kazakhstan is vast – the ninth-largest country in the world – yet there is relatively little information available in English about the attractions of this remarkable country.  With the Kazakh government seeking to promote the development of tourism, publication of the Bradt guide is timely.

Located between Russia and China, the state of Kazakhstan possesses an incredible diversity of natural beauty; this guide includes arrangements for visiting natural parks and reserves and special features such as singing sand dunes and the Sharyn Canyon - Asia’s equivalent of the Grand Canyon.

Key historical and archaeological sites are also given due prominence, Kazakhstan having been inhabited since the Stone Age.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #153839 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-10-24
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 432 pages

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Paul Brummell is a career diplomat with the UK’s Foreign Commonwealth Office and is currently Ambassador to Kazakhstan and non-resident Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan.  Previous posts have included Turkmenistan and he is author of Turkmenistan: The Bradt Travel Guide.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

In a speech in early 1954 the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev launched into an attack on the state of Soviet agriculture. He identified a major shortage of grain which, he argued, could not be addressed simply by more intensive cultivation in the traditional grain producing areas in Russia. Rather, the production of grain in new lands would be required. A plan was drawn up to plough 40m ha of virgin steppe in Kazakhstan and western Siberia, and put this to grain production.

  The inauguration of the Virgin Lands Campaign in 1954 was marked with great zeal. Hundreds of thousands of people were brought into the Virgin Lands from across the Soviet Union. The first train into Akmola bringing volunteers for the new scheme arrived from Almaty on 2 March 1954; the first train from Moscow arrived three days later. While many of the students and soldiers enlisted to help with the campaign stayed only temporarily, the Virgin Lands Campaign had an important effect on the demographic composition of northern Kazakhstan, greatly boosting the numbers of Slavonic peoples, especially Russians and Ukrainians. The area of land ploughed in 1954 was 19m ha, well above the target of 13m. An additional 14m ha was ploughed in the following year. The total crop area in Kazakhstan increased by more than three times. The harvest of 1956 appeared to vindicate the success of the programme, with more than half of the 125m tonnes of grain produced in the USSR coming from the new lands. Grain production in Kazakhstan rose from an average of less than 4m tonnes a year to more than 14m.

 


Customer Reviews

Kazakhstan (Bradt)5
What a pity the previous correspondent didn't return his FAULTY copy of Kazakhstan for a replacement. Because that is what it is - a mis-printed copy. This book is excellent, the sort of guide your fellow travelers would want to borrow every day. Highly recommended.

This book was invaluable5
I work in Kazakhstan and live in Alaska. This book was priceless and full of information that made my work and being here much easier. If you're going to Kazakhstan, this is the one book you should take with you and study before you go. The author is a career diplomat that gives good advice and local's perspective to boot. Don't leave for Kazakhstan without it.

Good resource5
I read the book after visiting Almaty, and found its guide to the city - a small fraction of the total page count - to be comprehensive and up-to-date. Still, a broader picture, emotional "feel" of the city, or the country, is somehow missing; "Apples are from Kazakhstan" by Christopher Robbins, in my opinion, does a good job there, and would be a worthwhile complement.