Austria presented papers beyond their usual topic of research or took particular interest in youth as a social group in different regions of Siberia.About a year before, in 15-17 November 2003, a conference was held at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology in Halle. The conference was held under the title "'Everything is still before you': Being Young in Siberia Today", and was organised by Joachim Otto Habeck. This was the first Western academic conference dedicated to the Siberian youth. Both conferences demonstrated the diversity of the field labelled "young people in Siberia today". An argument that "youth is a growing topic within the Siberian studies" (Habeck 2004: 3) sounds cliché and has little validity, because this statement neglects the decades-long Soviet scholarship, the works of cultural planners, economists, and so forth. But youth as the topic of research within Siberian studies has been quite marginal indeed. Studies about Siberian natives leave the impression that the inhabitants of Siberia are either adult or older. The "ethnographic" Siberia is a male-dominated, highly spiritual (shamanism-driven) adult world. It seems as if Siberians are children who leap into adulthood, skipping the phase of youth. The truth is that youth have always been there. All Siberian natives have been young, they have had problems with their parents and peers, they have experienced first love, searched for identity, and struggled to become adult and take the responsibility, and have had all other moments that young people have in their lives. Why do we know so little about that?There is quite a solid body of Western scholarship about Russian youth, and many topics of the post-Socialist period have been subject to study. The most http://www.folklore.ee/folklore/vol41/ventsel.pdf