应对“转型”的社会成本:后苏联时代俄罗斯和乌克兰的日常生活

J. Round, C. Williams
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引用次数: 74

摘要

自苏联解体以来,许多俄罗斯和乌克兰家庭经历了经济边缘化时期。本文的作用是研究转型的社会成本,指出官方报告低估了问题的真实规模,以及家庭对这些成本的反应。讨论的基础是在俄罗斯和乌克兰许多地点进行的定性和定量研究。这篇论文的主要论点之一是,非正式的经济实践对许多家庭来说至关重要,而且人们采用了各种各样的应对策略。这些策略往往揭示了国家-社会和工人-雇员关系中存在的不平等权力关系,并有助于详细描述后苏联社会中存在的高度腐败。此外,这些策略与它们发生的地点交织在一起,依赖于高水平的社会资本,确保家庭宁愿留在目前的位置,也不愿迁移到成本更低的地区。这篇论文的结论相当悲观,认为尽管俄罗斯和乌克兰的家庭在苏联解体后的20年里“应付自如”,但未来将面临新的挑战。这些问题包括人口老龄化、越来越多地使用信贷(违约可能导致被驱逐)和全球经济衰退,后者导致非正规领域的机会减少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Coping with the Social Costs of 'Transition': Everyday Life in Post-Soviet Russia and Ukraine
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, many Russian and Ukrainian households have experienced periods of economic marginalization. The role of this paper is to examine these social costs of transition, noting that official reporting underestimates the true scale of the problem, and the household responses to these costs.The discussions are based on both qualitative and quantitative research undertaken in numerous locations in Russia and Ukraine. One of the paper’s key arguments is that informal economic practices are crucial to many households and that a broad spectrum of coping tactics is employed.These tactics often reveal the unequal power relations that run through state – society and worker – employee relations and help detail the high levels of corruption that exist in post-Soviet societies. Furthermore, these tactics are entwined in the locations within which they take place and rely on high levels of social capital, ensuring that households would rather remain in their current location than migrate to cheaper regions.The paper concludes on a rather pessimistic note, arguing that, although Russian and Ukrainian households have ‘coped’ over the 20 years since the beginning of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the future poses new challenges.These include an ageing population, the increasing use of credit (default on which can lead to eviction) and the global recession, which leads to a decrease in opportunities in the informal sphere.
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