2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2018.04.006
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

On labor migration to Russia: Central Asian migrants and migrant families in the matrix of Russia's bordering policies

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
28
0
2

Year Published

2018
2018
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
6
3

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 41 publications
(31 citation statements)
references
References 21 publications
1
28
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…At some point they interrupted my speculations and said that people do not really think in long‐term categories and ‘one passport per family is enough’. Although the Russian state considers migrants as individual, temporary and ultimately disposable ‘homo laborans’ and limits possible options for the legally legible presence of migrants’ families on its territory (Nikiforova and Brednikova 2018), migration has long become the main livelihood strategy for many households in Tajikistan. Its ultimate goal is set at each stage and is replaced or pushed back by new emerging goals; the decision who stays and who goes is collectively negotiated every time (Abashin 2015: 128).…”
Section: ‘One Passport Per Family Is Enough’: Citizenship In Family Pmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At some point they interrupted my speculations and said that people do not really think in long‐term categories and ‘one passport per family is enough’. Although the Russian state considers migrants as individual, temporary and ultimately disposable ‘homo laborans’ and limits possible options for the legally legible presence of migrants’ families on its territory (Nikiforova and Brednikova 2018), migration has long become the main livelihood strategy for many households in Tajikistan. Its ultimate goal is set at each stage and is replaced or pushed back by new emerging goals; the decision who stays and who goes is collectively negotiated every time (Abashin 2015: 128).…”
Section: ‘One Passport Per Family Is Enough’: Citizenship In Family Pmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sosiaalisten oikeuksien kuten koulutukseen tai terveydenhuoltoon pääsyn lisäksi se määrittelee pitkälti myös ihmisten liikkuvuutta ja pääsyä asuntomarkkinoille. Viime aikoina rekisteröinti on siirtynyt usein harmaille markkinoille (Nikiforova & Brednikova 2018;Reeves 2013), jossa asuntojen omistajat ja työnantajat tarjoavat väärennettyjä rekisteröintejä, jolloin monet maahanmuuttajat rikkovat lakia tahattomasti (Muller 2018). Vuodet paperittomana Venäjällä tekivät kongolaisen miehelle myös asunto-ongelmat tutuiksi.…”
Section: Arjen Turvattomuus Venäjälläunclassified
“…4 Patrice Lumumban yliopisto tunnetaan myös Venäjän kansojen ystävyyden yliopistona (Peoples' Friendship University of Russia) ja sittemmin RUDN-yliopistona. Katso: http://www.rudn.ru 5 Asuinpaikan rekisteröiminen jäljitetään usein Neuvostoliiton asumislupaan propiska, jonka tarkoituksena oli säädellä ihmisten liikkumista Neuvostoliiton sisällä (Nikiforova, Brednikova 2018;Reeves 2013;Nozhenko 2010). Propiska kiinnitti henkilön tiettyyn asuinpaikkaan ja säänteli hänen pääsynsä työmarkkinoille ja palveluihin.…”
Section: Viitteetunclassified
“…Most studies of Russian migration explore various aspects of labor migration to Russia, especially from Central Asia and other former Soviet republics. Most attention is paid to migratory ties with Central Asian and other former Soviet states (the CIS and the Eurasian Economic Union) that are key players in Russian migration processes (e.g., Ryazantsev 2016;Kuznetsova and Round 2018;Nikiforova and Brednikova 2018). With the exception of a few studies of Chinese, Vietnamese, and other non-CIS immigration to Russia (e.g., Horie and Grigorichev 2015;Pismennaya et al 2015;Ryazantsev 2014;Ryazantsev, Man'shin, and Nguen 2013;Dixon 2010;Ryazantsev and Hunmei 2010), the literature is scarce on immigration from outside the former Soviet states (e.g., Bondarenko 2017;Boltovskaya 2010;Bondarenko et al 2009;Matusevich 2008;Ivanova 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%