Tourist industries and the “right to the city”: Constructing local identity in post-Soviet Sortavala through the access to tourism resources

Kuznetsov E. A., Mikhailovskaya V. A. Tourist industries and the “right to the city”: Constructing local identity in post-Soviet Sortavala through the access to tourism resources // The Russian Peasant Studies. 2025. V.10. №4. P. 40-71.

EDN: DYUCXN

Annotation

The article considers grassroots economic practices in the tourism sector of Sortavala, a town in northwestern Russia, which has undergone significant transformation following the COVID-19 pandemic and the closure of international borders in the 2020s. In the absence of large industrial enterprizes, domestic tourism has become a primary economic activity for local residents. The authors focus on tourism crafts — f lexible, small-scale, and often informal practices that aim at self-sufficiency — to show how they adapt to the region’s unstable social-economic conditions. These practices differ from both precarious wage labor and formal entrepreneurship, representing a distinct mode of engagement with the tourist economy, which is widely perceived as the only viable and strategically promising development path. Based on the qualitative study conducted in 2023–2024, the authors argue that access to tourism resources (places, infrastructure, narratives, and natural environments), which can be monetized through tourist interactions, serves as the central factor of participation in this economy. This access is unevenly distributed, has become a key site of social conflicts, and serves as not only an economic opportunity but also a mechanism for expressing and enacting a sense of belonging. Through tourism crafts, local actors assert a form of the “right to the city” — the right not only to inhabit but also to actively shape urban and natural spaces. Thus, grassroots involvement in tourism functions as a medium for articulating and renegotiating local identity.

Keywords

Sortavala, tourism economy, informal economy, tourism crafts, tourism resources, right to the city, local identity.  

About the authors

Egor A. Kuznetsov, Research Intern, Center for Sociocultural and Ethnolinguistic Research, Faculty of Humanities, National Research University “Higher School of Economics” (HSE University). Myasnitskaya St., 20, Moscow, 101000, Russia.
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Varvara A. Mikhailovskaya, Research Intern, Center for Sociocultural and Ethnolinguistic Research, Faculty of Humanities, National Research University “Higher School of Economics” (HSE University). Myasnitskaya St., 20, Moscow, 101000, Russia.
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.  

 

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Russian Peasant Studies

Peer-reviewed interdisciplinary academic journal in the field of theoretical and empirical peasant studies, rural sociology, economics and social geography. The journal publishes original works on the issues of socio-economic development of agricultural regions of Russia and the world, the history of the peasantry, including its formation and evolution, particularly from philosophical and cultural studies viewpoints. The journal aims at exploring the paths of Russian and international rural development and supporting cooperation of agrarian researchers representing different scientific disciplines. Read more>

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