Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:394Hits:19954882Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID080806
Title ProperNationalism, ethnic conflict, and job competition
Other Title Informationnon-Russian collective action in the USSR under perestroika
LanguageENG
AuthorKolsto, Pal
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The article examines the effects of job competition on ethnic relations within a multinational state. It argues that demographic increase leads to competition for blue-collar jobs while an increase in the number of graduates from higher education leads to competition over elite jobs. In the first case, people risk unemployment, in the second, blocked career opportunities. Mass-level unemployment may lead to anger-driven mass riots, while an intelligentsia will formulate more rational strategies to eliminate threatening competitors from the labour market. One such strategy is to insist that the state ought to be a national state, in which the national elites will be in control. While questions of identity no doubt also may have an enormously mobilising power in times of national resurgence, identity issues are normally intimately intertwined with interest politics. These mechanisms are traced in the history of ethnic mobilisation in the Soviet Union and the post-Soviet states during and after perestroika
`In' analytical NoteNations and Nationalism Vol. 14, No.1; Jan 2008: p151-169
Journal SourceNations and Nationalism Vol. 14, No.1; Jan 2008: p151-169
Key WordsEthnic Mobilisation ;  Former Soviet Union ;  Nationalism