El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.

The article analyses the Russian work collective from the perspective of internal migration, a hitherto neglected yet important aspect of studies of the work collective, given that the Soviet Union and contemporary Russia may be considered as ‘societies of migrants’. Drawing on structured network qu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lonkila, Markku, Salmi, Anna-Maria
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2008-12-01
Series:REDES: Revista Hispana para el Análisis de Redes Sociales
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revista-redes.rediris.es/html-vol15/Vol15_3.htm
_version_ 1818933101747765248
author Lonkila, Markku
Salmi, Anna-Maria
author_facet Lonkila, Markku
Salmi, Anna-Maria
author_sort Lonkila, Markku
collection DOAJ
description The article analyses the Russian work collective from the perspective of internal migration, a hitherto neglected yet important aspect of studies of the work collective, given that the Soviet Union and contemporary Russia may be considered as ‘societies of migrants’. Drawing on structured network questionnaires and thematic interviews with 38 male workers in the famous Kirov factory, St. Petersburg, we examine the extent to which the respondent turn to their co-workers for socialising, help and support in daily life. Despite the sweeping institutional changes brought by the transformation, the work collective continues to have an important impact in the daily life of workers, and migrant workers in particular. This is explained by an analysis of the Soviet-era migration process. Lacking other channels for adapting to the new life in the metropolis, the new ties that the migrants formed in the city were mostly related to their workplace. The importance of workplace-related ties may seem to be a trivial and inevitable finding, but we argue this is not so at least in two respects. First, the migrants’ networks, even after decades of residence in the city, are still marked by the migratory background, but there is nothing obvious in that they should remain so. Second, migration per se does not inevitably lead to co-workers being important, as is illustrated by the fact that the networks of Finnish migrant workers are not built around work. What matters then is not migration as an abstraction but the circumstances of the type of migration.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T04:43:02Z
format Article
id doaj.art-bfc31d5c958f447981314d7d72c24b8a
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1579-0185
language Spanish
last_indexed 2024-12-20T04:43:02Z
publishDate 2008-12-01
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
record_format Article
series REDES: Revista Hispana para el Análisis de Redes Sociales
spelling doaj.art-bfc31d5c958f447981314d7d72c24b8a2022-12-21T19:53:04ZspaUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaREDES: Revista Hispana para el Análisis de Redes Sociales1579-01852008-12-01153El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.Lonkila, MarkkuSalmi, Anna-MariaThe article analyses the Russian work collective from the perspective of internal migration, a hitherto neglected yet important aspect of studies of the work collective, given that the Soviet Union and contemporary Russia may be considered as ‘societies of migrants’. Drawing on structured network questionnaires and thematic interviews with 38 male workers in the famous Kirov factory, St. Petersburg, we examine the extent to which the respondent turn to their co-workers for socialising, help and support in daily life. Despite the sweeping institutional changes brought by the transformation, the work collective continues to have an important impact in the daily life of workers, and migrant workers in particular. This is explained by an analysis of the Soviet-era migration process. Lacking other channels for adapting to the new life in the metropolis, the new ties that the migrants formed in the city were mostly related to their workplace. The importance of workplace-related ties may seem to be a trivial and inevitable finding, but we argue this is not so at least in two respects. First, the migrants’ networks, even after decades of residence in the city, are still marked by the migratory background, but there is nothing obvious in that they should remain so. Second, migration per se does not inevitably lead to co-workers being important, as is illustrated by the fact that the networks of Finnish migrant workers are not built around work. What matters then is not migration as an abstraction but the circumstances of the type of migration.http://revista-redes.rediris.es/html-vol15/Vol15_3.htmpersonal network – internal migration – social support – workplace
spellingShingle Lonkila, Markku
Salmi, Anna-Maria
El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.
REDES: Revista Hispana para el Análisis de Redes Sociales
personal network – internal migration – social support – workplace
title El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.
title_full El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.
title_fullStr El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.
title_full_unstemmed El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.
title_short El colectivo obrero ruso y la migración.
title_sort el colectivo obrero ruso y la migracion
topic personal network – internal migration – social support – workplace
url http://revista-redes.rediris.es/html-vol15/Vol15_3.htm
work_keys_str_mv AT lonkilamarkku elcolectivoobrerorusoylamigracion
AT salmiannamaria elcolectivoobrerorusoylamigracion