2007
DOI: 10.1080/00905990701368738
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Crystallizing and Emancipating Identities in Post-Communist Estonia

Abstract: This article concerns collective identities in the context of EU enlargement and the post-Soviet transition of Estonian society, particularly of the two main ethno-linguistic groups: ethnic Estonians and the Russian-speaking population in Estonia. The empirical basis of the study is formed by factor structures of self-identification. The data were obtained from nationally representative surveys carried out in 2002, before Estonia joined the EU, and in 2005. The thinking patterns behind the structures of self-c… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…During the Soviet era, Estonia had a linguistically separate school system, so the Estonian language skills of the Russian-speaking population remain poor for migrants and subsequent generations and opportunities for interethnic contact are limited. One of the consequences of this policy is that the social networks of Estonians and the Russian-speaking minority in Estonia today are different depending on their linguistic ability (T. Vihalemm 2007). The number of interethnic contacts that people have is a key factor that influences their spatial mobility outside the residential area.…”
Section: Ethnic Groups In Estoniamentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…During the Soviet era, Estonia had a linguistically separate school system, so the Estonian language skills of the Russian-speaking population remain poor for migrants and subsequent generations and opportunities for interethnic contact are limited. One of the consequences of this policy is that the social networks of Estonians and the Russian-speaking minority in Estonia today are different depending on their linguistic ability (T. Vihalemm 2007). The number of interethnic contacts that people have is a key factor that influences their spatial mobility outside the residential area.…”
Section: Ethnic Groups In Estoniamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a third of Estonians (and half of Estonians in Tallinn) and half of the Russian-speaking population in Estonia come into contact with people from the other ethnic group in the workplace, contact is rare in their private lives (Korts 2009). Personal and family networks are highly segregated along ethnic lines (T. Vihalemm 2007). Even in the capital city, the number of friends and acquaintances from the other ethnic group that people communicate with regularly is very small (Korts 2009).…”
Section: Ethnic Groups In Estoniamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This implies that shared language and ethnic transnational ties to Russia are not the key factors that impact their decision-making with regard to foreign education. Being part of the EU, and the spread of global mass culture has had a homogenized impact on the value system and cultural orientation of the Estonian-speaking majority and the Russian-speaking minority (Vihalemm 2007), and this is clearly revealed in the orientation towards Europe in both groups.…”
Section: Discussion Of Main Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Estonian society is relatively segregated in terms of each language groups' residence, socioeconomic position (Tammaru and Kulu 2003;van Ham and Tammaru 2011), and social networks (Vihalemm 2007). The Russian-speaking minority is geographically concentrated in certain areas.…”
Section: Ethnic Groups and Segregation In Estoniamentioning
confidence: 99%