Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 23 – Like their
Russian counterparts, Kazakh experts have long debated the relative strength of
civic and ethnic attachments, Gulmira Ileuova says; but in many ways doing so
has distracted attention from a far more important development: the rise and intensification
of a wide variety of identities from familial and local to more global ones.
Commenting on a recent Almaty
roundtable on “Traditional Mentality and Modernization: Pitfalls and
Possibilities,” the Kazakh sociologist says her colleagues in the 1990s focused
primarily on how strong Soviet identities had remained in Kazakhstan and only
later on the balance between civic and ethnic ones (365info.kz/2017/07/kuda-idet-kazahstanskaya-natsiya-ili-kem-sebya-schitayut-kazahstantsy/).
In
the first decade after independence, Kazakhs shifted from identifying with “one
large identity” – as Soviets – to another one – as Kazakhstantsy. But over time,
“significant changes occurred, migration increased, and local identities
strengthened. As a result, the most important question became “’where are you
from?’ not ‘who are you?’”
She
argues that this diversity of self-identifications will only increase,
something that may open the way to “consolidation on some entirely new basis.
But this will happen only after another ten years.”
In
2004, Ileuova says she found that 57 percent of citizens of Kazakhstan
identified in the first instance as such, 26 percent listed their local
identity first, and only 4.9 percent listed ethnic identification. Religion was
only rarely a primary identity.
Civic
national identity rose to 71 percent in 2012 before falling back to 62 percent
in 2016; local identity fell to 17 percent in the first of these years and then
recovered to 23 percent in the latter. Ethnic and religious identities remained
relative low, the sociologist reports. But she does note that Kazakhs more than
other ethnic groups there are interested in how people identify.
Ileuova
concludes with the following observation: “With time we may encounter definite challenges
from the point of view of issues of integrating various groups of the
population of the country. At the same time, one cannot fail to note that the
developing multiplicity of identities still hasn’t changed interethnic
relations.”
But clearly
identities will continue to change rather than shift permanently from one thing
to another, the sociologist suggests.
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