Type | Journal Article - Problems of Post-Communism |
Title | Exit in the near abroad: the Russian minorities in Latvia and Kyrgyzstan |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 51 |
Issue | 6 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2004 |
Page numbers | 23-32 |
URL | http://www.uvm.edu/~mcommerc/PPC04.pdf |
Abstract | RUSSIANS in the near abroad do not generally resort to violence in order to express grievances related to post-Soviet nationalization processes. Their reactions to adverse changes include emigration, protest, and acceptance, but their responses to inimical elements of post-Soviet nationalization are not uniform—the degree of Russian exit, voice, and loyalty varies across Sovietsuccessorstates. 1 For example, there is a much lower rate of post-Soviet Russian emigration from Latvia, a state that has implemented exceptionally antagonistic nationalization policies, than from Kyrgyzstan, a state that has implemented more accommodating nationalization policies. Many scholars reason that Russian emigration from Soviet successor states is motivated by discriminatory policies and practices in those states. Rogers Brubaker, for instance, claims that economic competition based on ethnicity has contributed to the exit of Russiansfrom the Soviet southern tier and most likely will continue to do so in the future.2 Similarly, David Laitin argues that aspects of Kazakh nationalization that focus on job protection for ethnic Kazakhs motivate Russian emigration from Kazakhstan. |
» | Latvia - Population and Housing Census 2000 |