
Kin Majorities
Description
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Kin Majorities explores why these communities engage with dual citizenship and how this intersects, or not, with identity. Analyzing data collected from ordinary people in Crimea and Moldova in 2012 and 2013, just before Russia's annexation of Crimea, Eleanor Knott provides a crucial window into Russian identification in a time of calm. Perhaps surprisingly, the discourse and practice of Russian citizenship was largely absent in Crimea before annexation. Comparing the situation in Crimea with the strong presence of Romanian citizenship in Moldova, Knott explores two rarely researched cases from the ground up, shedding light on why Romanian citizenship was more prevalent and popular in Moldova than Russian citizenship in Crimea, and to what extent identity helps explain the difference.
Kin Majorities offers a fresh and nuanced perspective on how citizenship interacts with cross-border and local identities, with crucial implications for the politics of geography, nation, and kin-states, as well as broader understandings of post-Soviet politics.
Reviews / Votes
"Eleanor Knott's Kin Majorities is an empirically and theoretically welcome contribution to our knowledge about identity groups in post-Soviet spaces. Her terrific account challenges assumptions about what it means to be in a majority group with an 'external homeland' and - as with all good books - sets the agenda for much more research to come." Edward Schatz, University of Toronto and editor of Political Ethnography: What Immersion Contributes to the Study of Power "In a history of contested borderlands, Kin Majorities is a book about loss and gain. It looks "bottom-up" beyond states and ethnicity to meanings and practices. There is a great explicatory thrust to Knott's intersectional book in that it should be read for its methodology, the new categories she has created for the identity-citizenship space." The Russian Review "Kin Majorities has many insights to offer international lawyers, international relations scholars, and political theorists in addition to experts on Russian politics, Romanian politics, post-Soviet affairs, and comparative ethnic conflict." LSE Review of Books "An exemplary reminder of the ambiguity, hybridity and multiplicity of national identity." Europe-Asia StudiesMore details
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Content
- Cover
- Kin Majorities
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Tables and Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- Note on Usages and Transliteration
- Maps
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Kin-State Politics through the Identity-Citizenship Nexus
- 3 Crimea and Moldova as Kin Majorities
- 4 To Be Discriminated Against, or Not, in Crimea
- 5 Neither Russian Citizens nor Compatriots
- 6 To Be Nested, or Not, in Moldova
- 7 From Nested Identities to Nested Citizens
- 8 Identity, Citizenship, and Kin Majorities
- Appendix: A Note on Methods and Methodology
- Notes
- References
- Index
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