Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 4 – Over the last
two decades, the rapid urbanization of many of the peoples of the North Caucasus,
their migration to other parts of the Russian Federation, and declining albeit still
high fertility rates have transformed these peoples from archaic to modernizing
nations, according to Konstantin Kazenin.
The Caucasus specialist at the Russian
Academy of Economics and State Service told Sergey Markedonov in an interview
for the Prague-based Caucasus Times that it is a fundamental but widespread misconception
to continue to call these peoples “archaic” (caucasustimes.com/ru/demografija-na-severnom-kavkaze-bet-po-tradicionalizmu-konstantin-kazenin/).
In reality, Kazenin says, while the
North Eastern Caucasus continued to be distinguished from peoples in other parts
of Russia, “over recent decades this very system has changed essentially as a
result of urbanization, migration and declines in the number of children per
woman over a lifetime.
The process isn’t over – it normally
takes “a minimum of two generations,” Kazenin says – and it is accompanied by
stresses that can tear a society apart and lead to the emergence of radicalism
of various kinds, especially when the first generation to have left the village
reaches adulthood, something that is happening just now in this region.
In support of this argument, Kazenin
suggests that when the history of the Arab Spring is written seriously “and not
at the level of ‘Churchill dreamed this all up in 1918,” people will find that “in
a number of the countries involved, protests were preceded by decades of intensive
migration from villages into the cities.”
They will also find that the
migrants often are at loose ends while the traditional clans in the villages
are able despite the loss of population to control more things, something via
political alliances and sometimes via the criminal world. That has certainly been the pattern in
Daghestan, for instance, the Moscow scholar says.
At the same time, Kazenin argues,
clans today in Dahgestan are not that different from family groups elsewhere in
Russia, although they assumed a much larger role in the first years after the
disintegration of the USSR “when the federal authorities were present there
only nominally” and to a certain extent they have maintained that large
position.
Outmigration has also played a role
in changing the social structure and values of the northeastern Caucasus, he
continues. But especially important has been the decline in the fertility rate
in its societies. In the 1960s, most women
there had four children, while in Russia even then it was fewer than two. Now
the North Caucasian women have fewer although not as few as Russians do.
This change not only affects overall
demographic numbers. “It typically goes in parallel with very serious changes
in the private life of the ordinary individual because if the average family has
many children,” the roles of women and men remain traditional because a woman
who bears four children is out of the workforce for a long time and must defer
to her husband.
With fewer children, she can get an education
and hold a job more easily; and she is thus in a better position to challenge
traditional family patterns, Kazenin says. When fertility rates fall, the
requirements of looking after children cease to serve as “the cement” holding
the traditional family and more broadly society in place.
That leads to dramatic changes in
gender roles and in social structures, he continues. “Our field research in
Daghestan finds, for example, a reduction in the share of marriages concluded
at the initiative of older relatives and the growth, although still slow, of
the fraction of marriages between people of different nationalities.”
“And even those aspects of fertility
in the northeastern Caucasus which set it apart from other regions of Russia
such as early marriage and an early ‘start’ of maternity should not be
considered today as a mechanic following of some ‘archaic’ pattern.” In most
cases, these are a conscious and religious choice rather than ‘a blind reproduction
of norms.”
What is even more important, Kazenin
suggests, is that people in the region are beginning to discuss that which in
the past was not talked about: “family violence, forced marriages, and the serious
psychological barriers between daughters and relatives … Twenty years ago, there
simply wasn’t any language to talk about these things in public.”
Now such a language exists, and
women as well as men are using it. That is “a hundred times more important”
than almost anything else in promoting the continuing transformation of these
societies, Kazenin concludes.
No comments:
Post a Comment