次等公民身份:中亚新俄罗斯公民的入籍和归属。

IF 1.2 3区 社会学 Q3 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Citizenship Studies Pub Date : 2024-11-20 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1080/13621025.2024.2428667
Malika Bahovadinova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文探讨了塔吉克斯坦新近入籍俄罗斯的公民归属感的危险。当俄罗斯的公民身份对种族化的移民工人来说变得容易获得时,它就变得次要化了,这是一个比公民身份的新自由主义化更广泛的过程。对民族的种族化理解,本身就是苏联帝国的遗产,塑造了对俄罗斯政治成员的理解。这既影响了俄罗斯移民立法,也影响了俄罗斯公民身份,因为以前的移徙工人大批成为俄罗斯公民。本文还探讨了最近入籍的公民如何在新公民包容的深刻政治中接受新的政治形式的模糊性。前移徙工人认为他们属于俄罗斯和塔吉克斯坦,声称他们的跨国生活和对祖国的权利是积极的政治代理人。然而,“祖国”的概念并不是严格的国家或领土:祖国是通过局部和空间的经验和记忆来理解的。与此同时,前移民工人被纳入俄罗斯的政治主体,也加剧了俄罗斯公民身份本身的脆弱性,现在只要法院下令,公民身份就可以被撤销或废除。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Subaltern citizenship: naturalization and belonging for New Russian citizens from Central Asia.

This article explores the perils of belonging among recently naturalized citizens in Russia from Tajikistan. As citizenship in Russia becomes accessible to ethnicized migrant workers, it becomes subalternized, a process broader than citizenship's neoliberalization. A racialized understanding of ethnicity, itself a legacy of the Soviet empire, shapes understandings of political membership in Russia. This has influenced both Russian migration legislation, as well as Russian citizenship, as former migrant workers become Russian citizens en masse. This article also explores how recently naturalized citizens embrace the ambiguity of new political forms of belonging within the deeply charged politics of new citizens' inclusion. Former migrant workers construe their belonging in both Russia and Tajikistan, claiming their transnational lives and rights to motherland/s as active political agents. Ideas of 'motherland', however, are not strictly national or territorial: motherland is understood through localized and spatial experiences and memories. At the same time, former migrant workers' inclusion as political subjects in Russia has heightened the fragility of Russian citizenship itself, whereby citizenship can now be revoked and annulled with as little as a court order.

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来源期刊
Citizenship Studies
Citizenship Studies POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
85
期刊介绍: Citizenship Studies publishes internationally recognised scholarly work on contemporary issues in citizenship, human rights and democratic processes from an interdisciplinary perspective covering the fields of politics, sociology, history and cultural studies. It seeks to lead an international debate on the academic analysis of citizenship, and also aims to cross the division between internal and academic and external public debate. The journal focuses on debates that move beyond conventional notions of citizenship, and treats citizenship as a strategic concept that is central in the analysis of identity, participation, empowerment, human rights and the public interest.
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