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E-raamat: Migration and Welfare Austerity: Mobilizing Kinship for Care, Welfare and Development in Kyrgyzstan

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Migration and Welfare Austerity: Mobilizing Kinship for Care, Welfare and Development in Kyrgyzstan

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After the collapse of the Soviet Union, residents of Alma, a village in Kyrgyzstan, were faced with many challenges. Economic crisis and the elimination of welfare support forced an entire generation to become labour migrants in Russia. Those left behind were sustained by migrants remittances and charitable activities, but at a cost. As villagers built upon existing kinship structures to create new practices of mutual aid on the lines of Islamic teaching, they suffered from the dark side of kinship. This book shares experiences of people in Alma and its Moscow-based diaspora and how they created a moral economy of migration that became territorialised as kindship was de-territorialised.

Arvustused

What makes this book particularly appealing is its ability to present both a fresh perspective on the everyday lives of migrants and a broader view of kinship in Soviet and post-Soviet contexts. The author skillfully and convincingly weaves together local, Russian, Western, and Soviet perspectives. Sherzod Eraliev, Lund University

Acknowledgements



Introduction



Chapter
1. The Central Asian Family in Historical Context: The Bright Side
and the Dark Side of Kinship

Chapter
2. Silent Voices and a Lack of Parental Authority: The Dark Side of
Kinship

Chapter
3. Dark Side of Kinship and Uncertain Marriages: Shame, Temporary
Nike and Divorce

Chapter
4. Performance and Competition: House Building and Migrants Care of
Elderly Parents

Chapter
5. Almagrad: The Mobilization of Translocal Lineage-Based Community
in Moscow

Chapter
6. Doing Good Aid Within Translocal Lineages

Chapter
7. Silence, Performance: International Migration, Internal Migration
and Village-Level Infrastructural Development



Conclusion: The Bright Side and the Dark Side of Kinship



References

Index
Aksana Ismailbekova is Senior Research Fellow at the Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient in Berlin, Germany. Her research focuses on the importance of gender, kinship and religion in negotiating socioeconomic change. She is the author of the book Blood Ties and the Native Sons: Poetics of Patronage in Kyrgyzstan (Indian University Press, 2017), and the co-editor of Surviving Everyday Life: The Security Capes of Threatened People in Central Asia (Bristol University Press, 2020).