6533b83afe1ef96bd12a790c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Manoeuvring in Between: Mapping Out the Transnational Identity of Russian-Speaking Latvians in Sweden and Great Britain

Iveta Jurkane-hobeinEvija Kļave

subject

education.field_of_study05 social sciencesPopulation0211 other engineering and technologies0507 social and economic geographyIdentity (social science)Latvian021107 urban & regional planningGender studies02 engineering and technologylanguage.human_languagePolitical sciencelanguageNational IdentitiesSoviet unioneducation050703 geographyIdentity formation

description

AbstractThe proportion of the Russian-speaking population in Latvia increased dramatically during the Soviet period from 12% in 1935 to 42% in 1990 due to organised labour migration within the Soviet Union. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, especially since the end of the 1990s, many Russian-speaking Latvians have migrated to Western countries. Very little is known about the national identities of these Russian-speaking Latvians. By analysing 30 life histories of Russian-speaking migrants from Latvia in Sweden and Great Britain, this study aims to analyse the transnational identities of Russian-speaking Latvians abroad. The analysis shows that the migrants’ own migration patterns in addition to the migration history of their families create interlinked and sometimes conflicting layers of transnational identity. Drawing on the interviews, three main processes in the identity formation were distinguished: aspiring to a Latvian identity, claiming an unrecognised Russian-speaking Latvian identity and developing transnational ‘non-belonging’.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12092-4_8