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E-grāmata: Informal Post-Socialist Economy: Embedded Practices and livelihoods [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by (Institute of Political Science and Governance, Tallinn University, Estonia.), Edited by (University of Birmingham, UK)
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From smugglers to entrepreneurs, blue-collar workers and taxi drivers, this book deals with the multitude of characters engaged in informal economic practices in the former socialist regions. Going beyond a conception of informality as opposed to the formal sector, its authors demonstrate the fluid nature of informal transactions straddling the crossroads between illegal, illicit, socially acceptable and symbolically meaningful practices. Their argument is informed by a wide range of case studies, from Central Europe to the Baltics and Central Asia, each of which is constructed around a single informant. Each chapter narrates the story of a composite person or household that was carefully selected or constructed by an author with long-standing ethnographic research experience in the given field site.

Wide in geographical, empirical and theoretical scope, the book uses ethnographic narrative accounts of everyday life to make links between ‘ordinary’ meanings of informality. Challenging reductively economistic perspectives on cross-border trading, undeclared work and other informal activities, the authors illustrate the wide variety of interpretive meanings that people ascribe to such practices. Alongside ‘getting by’ and ‘getting ahead’ in recently marketised societies, these meanings relate to sociality, kinship-ties and solidarity, along with more surprising ‘political’ and moral reasonings.

List of contributors
xi
Acknowledgments xiv
Foreword xvi
Catherine Wanner
Introduction: informality -- enduring practices, entwined livelihoods 1(18)
Jeremy Morris
Abel Polese
Part 1 `Entrepreneurial' informality? Self- and off-the-books employment
19(100)
1 The diverse livelihood practices of healthcare workers in Ukraine: the case of Sasha and Natasha
21(14)
Colin C. Williams
Olga Onoschenko
2 The story of Sarunas: an Invisible Citizen of Lithuania
35(16)
Ida Harboe Knudsen
3 Moonlighting strangers met on the way: the nexus of informality and blue-collar sociality in Russia
51(16)
Jeremy Morris
4 Nannies and informality in Romanian local childcare markets
67(18)
Borbala Kovacs
5 Drinking with Vova: an individual entrepreneur between illegality and informality
85(17)
Abel Polese
6 When is an illicit taxi driver more than a taxi driver? Case studies from transit and trucking in post-socialist Slovakia
102(17)
David Karjanen
Part 2 At home abroad? Transnational informality and the invisible flows of people and goods
119(68)
7 From shuttle trader to businesswomen: the informal bazaar economy in Kyrgyzstan
121(14)
Anna Cieslewska
8 `Business as casual': shuttle trade on the Belarus-Lithuania border
135(17)
Olga Sasunkevich
9 `The glove compartment half-full of letters' -- informality and cross-border trade at the edge of the Schengen Area
152(13)
Kristine Muller
Judith Miggelbrink
10 Informal economy writ large and small: from Azerbaijani herb traders to Moscow shop owners
165(22)
Lale Yalcin-Heckmann
Index 187
Jeremy Morris teaches at the University of Birmingham, UK



Abel Polese is a research fellow at the Institute for International Conflict Resolution and Reconstruction of Dublin City University and Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Political Science and Governance of Tallinn University.