
New Books Network Anna Zhelnina, "Private Life, Public Action: How Housing Politics Mobilized Citizens in Moscow" (Temple UP, 2025)
Dec 5, 2025
In this engaging discussion, Anna Żelnina, an assistant professor specializing in interdisciplinary social science, delves into her book on Moscow's 2017 renovation plan. She reveals how urban renewal sparked unexpected activism among residents, many of whom had no prior political experience. Anna explores the intense debates within communities, the often shocking reactions to displacement, and the transformation of ordinary spaces into hubs of mobilization. Her insights show how housing issues can drive political engagement, carrying lessons applicable beyond Moscow.
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Scale And Research Gap Of Renovation
- Renovation proposed demolishing over 4,000 Soviet-era apartment buildings, affecting more than a million Muscovites.
- Anna Żelnina found little prior research on how such large-scale renewal reshaped residents' social and political life.
Housing Views Shaped By Private Trajectories
- Housing opinions depended on socioeconomic status, housing quality, trust in government, and family housing histories.
- Żelnina shows these private trajectories shaped whether residents welcomed or feared relocation.
Soviet Legacies And Moscow Inequality
- Soviet-era housing instilled the idea of housing as a right even after privatization.
- Moscow's unequal neighborhood prestige and migration patterns layered socialist legacies onto contemporary aspirations.


