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ID098378
Title ProperMobility decision-Making and new diasporic spaces
Other Title Informationconceptualizing Korean diasporas in the Post-Soviet space
LanguageENG
AuthorSaveliev, Igor
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Over half a million ethnic Koreans found themselves in the post-Soviet states after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Caught up in the political and economic transformation of these countries, they faced the necessity of constructing their own strategies for survival and resettlement. Briefly explaining the formation of Russian Koreans' primary diasporas in their historical context and focusing on the diasporians' mobility in the post-Soviet era, this study will show how the destruction of the constraints of the authoritarian period together with the collapse of the regime itself affects diasporas and enlarges the spaces available to them. Addressing the issue of the diaporians' relationship to place and space, this article attempts to contribute to the conceptualization of the construction of new diasporic spaces and the discussion of mobility decision making, suggesting that diasporians, who had been long deprived by various constraints of the right to choose their place of residence, have comparatively high mobility and construct newer, much more sophisticated and far-flung diasporic layers.
`In' analytical NotePacific Affairs Vol. 83, No. 3; Sep 2010: p481-504
Journal SourcePacific Affairs Vol. 83, No. 3; Sep 2010: p481-504
Key WordsRussian Koreans ;  Koreans ;  Sakhalin Koreans ;  Korean Diaspora ;  Diasporic Space ;  Post-authoritarian Society ;  Mobility Decisions-making