WORKING WITH RUSSIAN REGIONS

Russiakaners does not operate independently of regional authorities. The initiative is designed to function in cooperation with participating Russian regions that have expressed interest in structured agricultural development and rural revitalisation.

Each region has its own priorities, land policies, infrastructure capacity, and administrative processes. For this reason, engagement is handled region by region rather than through a single national model.

Regional Engagement

Initial engagement begins through dialogue with regional representatives. Discussions focus on agricultural viability, available land, infrastructure readiness, and long-term settlement capacity.

No region is activated without administrative clarity. The objective is structured cooperation, not informal relocation.

Regions are evaluated based on several practical factors:

Agricultural suitability
Access to infrastructure and logistics
Administrative cooperation
Long-term regional stability
Capacity for phased settlement

The goal is not rapid expansion. The goal is sustainable alignment.

Regional Activation Model

When a region moves forward, development follows a structured sequence.

First, documentation and cooperative registration are formalised within the region.

Second, a pilot phase is established with a limited number of member families.

Third, agricultural operations begin under cooperative coordination.

Only after stability is demonstrated does expansion occur.

This phased model prevents overextension and protects both families and regional partners.

Family Placement

Placement within a region is not random. It is based on capacity, agricultural alignment, and cooperative readiness.

Families are evaluated according to experience, operational capability, and long-term intent. Regions are matched based on agricultural fit and available opportunity.

There are no guaranteed placements. All movement is capacity-based and subject to regional conditions.

Long-Term Regional Model

The intention is to build stable, region-based agricultural cooperatives that integrate lawfully into local rural systems. Expansion into additional regions occurs only when the governance, infrastructure, and administrative foundation of the existing region is secure.

This approach prioritises durability over speed.