Share
Fr. 170.00
Elena Khlinovskaya Rockhill, Rockhill Elena Khlinovskaya
Lost to the State - Family Discontinuity, Social Orphanhood Residential Care in Russian
English · Hardback
Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks
Description
Zusatztext " Reflecting long-standing anthropological and sociological interests in bureaucracy and institutions! as well as in kinship and the family! this book provides a wealth of ethnographic data about vulnerable children in the new Russia! their relationships to their parents! the state! and each other?.It is difficult to do justice to this complex book in a short space. As a study of children in institutions! it is revealing and! thanks to the outstanding writing! often very moving?This is a profound study of kinship and its consequences which deserves a very wide readership. " · JRAI " This study is extremely well done; a fluently written! scholarly account and analysis that provides a necessary addition to the "post-Soviet" literature! which has few such sharp analyses of the family! not least because the author takes on relevant debates and histories that both add considerable depth to this discussion and widen the applicability of the primary focus. Thus! we are given a marvellously careful and detailed insight into the workings of a provincial bureaucracy still shaped by the mores and customs of a Soviet bureaucracy but now faced with the sharply different context of the post-Soviet world. " · Catherine Alexander! Goldsmiths College! London Informationen zum Autor Elena Khlinovskaya Rockhill was born in Russia and first trained as a Biologist. In 2004 she received her Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from Darwin College, Cambridge University. From 2004–2007 she worked as a Research Associate at the Department of Social Anthropology, Cambridge University. She was a 2007 Wenner-Gren Hunt Postdoctoral Fellow, and a PI for an ESF-funded international project ‘Moved by the State: Perspectives on Relocation and Resettlement in the Circumpolar North’ at the University of Alberta, Canada (2007–2010). Klappentext Childhood held a special place in Soviet society: seen as the key to a better future, children were imagined as the only privileged class. Therefore, the rapid emergence in post-Soviet Russia of the vast numbers of vulnerable 'social orphans', or children who have living relatives but grow up in residential care institutions, caught the public by surprise, leading to discussions of the role and place of childhood in the new society. Based on an in-depth study the author explores dissonance between new post-Soviet forms of family and economy, and lingering Soviet attitudes, revealing social orphans as an embodiment of a long-standing power struggle between the state and the family. The author uncovers parallels between (post-) Soviet and Western practices in child welfare and attitudes towards 'bad' mothers, and proposes a new way of interpreting kinship where the state is an integral member. Zusammenfassung Childhood held a special place in Soviet society: seen as the key to a better future, children were imagined as the only privileged class. That is why the rapid emergence in post-Soviet Russia of the vast numbers of social orphansA" or children left without parental care,A" children who have living relatives but grow up in residential care... Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Figures and Tables Acknowledgements Notes on Transliteration List of Acronyms and Abbreviations Introduction The Scope of the Problem What is this Study About? Time Line: Soviet and Post-Soviet Notes on Methodology Theoretical and Conceptual Framework PART I: BECOMING A SOCIAL ORPHAN Chapter 1. A Brief History of Family Policy in Russia Pre-Revolutionary Shelters and the Concept of the Child The Soviet Period: Family Discontinuity and Children-out-of-Family Chapter 2. The State as a Co-Parent Fieldsite: Magadan The Child Welfare Network Residential Care Instituti...
List of contents
List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgements
Notes on Transliteration
List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
Introduction
The Scope of the Problem What is this Study About?
Time Line: Soviet and Post-Soviet Notes on Methodology
Theoretical and Conceptual Framework
PART I: BECOMING A SOCIAL ORPHAN
Chapter 1. A Brief History of Family Policy in Russia
Pre-Revolutionary Shelters and the Concept of the Child
The Soviet Period: Family Discontinuity and Children-out-of-Family
Chapter 2. The State as a Co-Parent
Fieldsite: Magadan
The Child Welfare Network
Residential Care Institutions and their Functions
Categories of the Family
The Benevolent State and 'Good' Parents: Voluntary Placements and Cooperation
Chapter 3. State and Family: Tilting the Balance of Power
Neblagopoluchnye Parents: Tension between the State and the Family
'Inadequate Fulfilment of Parental Duties'
Working with the Neblagopoluchnaya Family
Chapter 4. Parents Overwhelmed by the State
'Child Appropriation': The Case Study of Maria
Court Hearings
Deprivation of Voice and Disempowerment of the Parent
Chapter 5. Norms and Deviance
The 'Best Interests of the Child': Moral Judgement of the Parent
The Child's Biological Family: The Severance of Ties and 'Symbolic Death' of Parents
The Construction of Family by the State: A Society of Virtual Kin
PART II. BEING A SOCIAL ORPHAN
Chapter 6. The State as a Sole Parent
The Rake's Progress: The Child's Journey through Residential Homes
The Cosmology of Institutions
Chapter 7. The World of Social Orphans
Experiencing Institutions: Narratives of Former Inmates
Misha's Signposts of Institutional Life
Unpacking Parent-Child Obligations: Dispersed Responsibility and Accountability
Two Worlds: Orphans and the Wider Society
PART III: POST-SOVIET OR SOVIET? SELF-PERPETUATION OF THE SYSTEM
Chapter 8. The Continuing Soviet Legacy: Paradoxes of Change and Continuity
Childhood and Family Today: The Shifting Domains of Public and Private Continuity of Practices and Attitudes
'Moral Panic': Current Descendants of Witchcraft
Accusations and Show Trials
Self-Perpetuation of the System
Alternative Approaches
Chapter 9. The Post-Soviet Case in a Wider Context
Conclusion
Modes of relatedness
Power Asymmetry
Appendix I: List of Documents Supplied to the Court by the Guardianship Department and the Baby Home in Maria's Case
Appendix II: Reminiscences of Two 'Bad' Childhoods
References
Glossary
Index
About the author
Elena Khlinovskaya Rockhill was born in Russia and first trained as a Biologist. In 2004 she received her Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from Darwin College, Cambridge University. From 2004–2007 she worked as a Research Associate at the Department of Social Anthropology, Cambridge University. She was a 2007 Wenner-Gren Hunt Postdoctoral Fellow, and a PI for an ESF-funded international project ‘Moved by the State: Perspectives on Relocation and Resettlement in the Circumpolar North’ at the University of Alberta, Canada (2007–2010).
Product details
| Authors | Elena Khlinovskaya Rockhill, Rockhill Elena Khlinovskaya |
| Publisher | BERGHAHN BOOKS, INC |
| Languages | English |
| Product format | Hardback |
| Released | 01.12.2010 |
| EAN | 9781845457389 |
| ISBN | 978-1-84545-738-9 |
| No. of pages | 336 |
| Subjects |
Social sciences, law, business
> Sociology
> Sociological theories
Russia, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Children's Studies, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Services, Child welfare, Age groups: children, Child welfare and youth services, Anthropology (General), Sociology, Anthropology (General); Sociology |
Customer reviews
No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.
Write a review
Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.