Javascript must be enabled to continue!
African Immigrants in Russia
View through CrossRef
While the Russian migration literature captures well social and economic realities of Central Asian labour migrants, it takes only an infrequent notice of other less visible groups of immigrants. One of such groups, African immigrants, is estimated to consist of about 40,000 individuals, mainly from North and Sub-Saharan Africa. This paper looks at the African immigrants in Russia. After identifying the African immigrants, the article focuses on refugees and economic migrants in more detail. Who are the African immigrants in Russia? How do they see Russia and Finland as the countries of immigration? The study is based on scholarly literature of African immigration to Russia and asylum interview documents of the African asylum seekers in Finland. The most prominent group of Africans in Russia are immigrants distributing advertisements at metro stations in large cities such as Moscow. However, these immigrants struggling with their poor status are only part of the Africans in Russia. The highly educated African diaspora and businessmen trained in the Soviet Union, as well as the staff of the delegations, live well- off lives in Russia and there is little interaction between the above-mentioned “new” immigrant groups. In this article, we focus especially on the “new” immigrants who arrived in Russia after the break-up of the Soviet Union and their stories of everyday insecurity. International crime and human trafficking enable asylum seekers to move around in Europe today. At the same time, it puts several groups of people, such as women, children and the low-skilled, particularly vulnerable to various forms of exploitation during the journey.
Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (FCTAS RAS)
Title: African Immigrants in Russia
Description:
While the Russian migration literature captures well social and economic realities of Central Asian labour migrants, it takes only an infrequent notice of other less visible groups of immigrants.
One of such groups, African immigrants, is estimated to consist of about 40,000 individuals, mainly from North and Sub-Saharan Africa.
This paper looks at the African immigrants in Russia.
After identifying the African immigrants, the article focuses on refugees and economic migrants in more detail.
Who are the African immigrants in Russia? How do they see Russia and Finland as the countries of immigration? The study is based on scholarly literature of African immigration to Russia and asylum interview documents of the African asylum seekers in Finland.
The most prominent group of Africans in Russia are immigrants distributing advertisements at metro stations in large cities such as Moscow.
However, these immigrants struggling with their poor status are only part of the Africans in Russia.
The highly educated African diaspora and businessmen trained in the Soviet Union, as well as the staff of the delegations, live well- off lives in Russia and there is little interaction between the above-mentioned “new” immigrant groups.
In this article, we focus especially on the “new” immigrants who arrived in Russia after the break-up of the Soviet Union and their stories of everyday insecurity.
International crime and human trafficking enable asylum seekers to move around in Europe today.
At the same time, it puts several groups of people, such as women, children and the low-skilled, particularly vulnerable to various forms of exploitation during the journey.
Related Results
Assessment of Immigrants’ Premium and Tax Payments for Health Care and the Costs of Their Care
Assessment of Immigrants’ Premium and Tax Payments for Health Care and the Costs of Their Care
ImportanceSome worry that immigrants burden the US economy and particularly the health care system. However, no analyses to date have assessed whether immigrants’ payments for prem...
Immigrants’ Citizenship Perceptions
Immigrants’ Citizenship Perceptions
Adopting a transnational lens, Immigrants’ Citizenship Perceptions: Sri Lankans in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand investigates Sri Lankan immigrants’ complex views towards thei...
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Abstract
Background: Human microbiota plays a fundamental role in modulating the immune response. Western environment and lifestyle are envisaged to alter the human microbi...
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Linking the westernised oropharyngeal microbiome to the immune response in Chinese immigrants
Abstract
Background: Human microbiota plays a fundamental role in modulating the immune response, and these microbiota are associated with Western environment and lifestyle...
African American Humor
African American Humor
The sophistication of the African American humor tradition testifies to its centrality in African American culture. Since its initial emergence in the contexts of enslavement, wher...
Information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada
Information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada
PurposeStudies on the information behaviour of immigrants including refugees across the globe show a significant dependency of immigrants on their informal networks for meeting var...
African Americans in Europe
African Americans in Europe
African Americans have an extensive history and continuing presence in Europe. This reflects the artistic, cultural, and intellectual exchanges between the peoples of Europe and th...
African Immigrants in the United States
African Immigrants in the United States
African Immigrants in the United States: The Gendering Significance of Race? examines recent trends and implications of the growth of African immigration to the United States. Mama...

