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Caroline Humphrey, University of Cambridge
"In this meticulously researched and powerfully argued book, Albert Baiburin mines the history of the Soviet passport as both an instrument of social engineering and control and a totem of individual experience and cultural creativity. The result is an innovative and fascinating account of the Soviet experiment."
Daniel Beer, Royal Holloway, University of London
"For Soviet citizens, the passport was a crucial possession that both enabled and restricted them. Albert Baiburin's exhaustive and lively account, fluently translated by Stephen Dalziel, shows why passports were so central to the maintenance of the party dictatorship."
Robert Service, University of Oxford
"significantly advances our understanding of a crucial institution of Soviet governance"
H-Soz-Kult
"scintillating, panoramic history-cum-ethnography of the Soviet passport. Filled with surprising insights and details, it now appears in Stephen Dalziel's superb and lavishly illustrated translation."
Times Literary Supplement
"thoughtful, deeply researched and fluently translated"
History Today