Monitoring Obshchestvennogo Mneniya: Ekonomicheskie i Sotsial'nye Peremeny
Volume 1, Issue 137, 2017, Pages 121-139

Education migration and ethno-social conflicts in the academe of Russia, Ukraine and the USA (Article) (Open Access)

Tregubova N.D. , Starikov V.S.
  • a Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
  • b 'Transnationalism and Migration Processes: Comparative and Institutional Analysis' Laboratory, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation

Abstract

The authors present preliminary outcomes of a field research dealing with comparative analysis of education migration and ethno-social conflict in academic environment. The research was conducted in Russia (Kazan, Saint Petersburg and Syktyvkar), Ukraine (Kiev), and the United States of America (Los Angeles). The paper starts with a discussion of the context of education migration in three countries and conceptual considerations. Theoretical and methodological basis of this study combines mechanistic perspectives, neo-institutional approach, and sociology of everyday life. Then discussion turns to the flows of internal and external student migration influenced by different academic environment and ethno-social conflict potential. The paper argues that casual mechanisms of socio-ethnic conflicts unfold on institutional, organizational, and individual levels (level of everyday interaction). The authors provide characteristics of three generalized models of 'no occurrence' of ethno-social conflicts in academe. The study exposes a balance between the formation of small groups and friendly networks between students and formation of the «ghettoized' groups inside the student community. The paper explores the interrelation between the equality demand and actual academic practices in higher education institutes in Russia, Ukraine, and the USA.

Author Keywords

Ukraine Neo-institutionalism Comparative analysis Higher education Ethno-social conflict Russia Educational (student) migration Casual mechanism USA

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85020473497&doi=10.14515%2fmonitoring.2017.1.08&partnerID=40&md5=62f8874a9e722cdfd9eb8d75ff24d126

DOI: 10.14515/monitoring.2017.1.08
ISSN: 22195467
Original Language: Russian