Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 19 – Census takers in
Russia next year will be allowed to prompt those who have difficulty specifying
what is their native language by asking them what language they learned first
in their childhood, but they won’t be allowed to ask leading questions about
ethnic identity or allow respondents to give more than one nationality.
Sergey Yegorenko, the acting head of
Rosstat, the Russian government’s statistical agency, made that announcement on
Monday to a meeting of the Interagency Working Group on Issues of Inter-Ethnic
Relations (nazaccent.ru/content/30165-perepischikam-zapretyat-zadavat-navodyashie-voprosy-o.html).
He also announced that the census
this time around for the first time will allow residents to “independently fill
in” the questionnaires electronically. Yegorenko’s remarks suggest that the
census forms and procedures are not almost completely set, a requirement if the
authorities are to be ready for this massive effort next year.
At the meeting, Academician Valery
Tishkov, the former nationalities minister and ethnography institute director
who has served as a close advisor to Vladimir Putin on ethnic issues, made two
interventions, one of which did not draw a response from the Rosstat head but the
second of which was rejected by Yegorenko out of hand.
On the one hand, Tishkov said that “nationality
may not always correspond with native language and therefore questions must be
asked so as not to confuse those being enumerated.” Just how this might lead to
changes and whether they might be a backdoor for the introduction of leading
questions was not reported.
And on the other, the academician
repeated his call for the offspring of mixed marriages to have the opportunity
to say that they were members of several ethnic groups. Yekorenko “categorically” rejected that idea,
Nazaccent reports, saying that the proposal at least for now is “inexpedient.”
From the point of view of many minorities,
the real problem with the upcoming census will not be the presence or absence
of leading questions from census takers or the ability or inability to declare more
than one ethnic identity. Instead, it will be how Rosstat will group or report responses
on the most sensitive questions of identity and language.
In all censuses, people respond
variously to questions and officials who process their responses group them
according to often unpublished rules. Thus, it is still an open question whether
those who declare themselves to be Siberians or Cossacks will be counted as
such or whether those who respond in that way will be listed as Russians as has
happened before.
And it is also an open question
whether the authorities will allow those who are members of the subdivisions of
the Circassian nation (the Adygeys, Cherkess, Kabardins, and Shapsugs among
others) to declare themselves to be Circassians or insist that they be listed
separately on the basis of their place of residence.
Those issues are likely to become the
subject of controversy as the census proceeds, controversies more serious than
the ones Yegorenko appeared to have put to rest this week.
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