Fr. 69.00

The Dynamics of Immigrant Agency - Identity Formation, Translanguaging and Purposeful Actions of Post-Soviet Migrants in West Germany

English · Hardback

Will be released 12.04.2026

Description

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This open access book explores the dynamics of human agency within the complex context of settlement-oriented immigration through an in-depth case study of immigrants from the former Soviet Union who embarked on their journey to Germany during the 1990s and early 2000s. Employing a transnational lens and an interpretive approach, the book presents a novel empirically grounded Immigrant Agency Theory. Bridging the realms of integration and transnationalism, the Immigrant Agency Theory is a multifaceted analytical tool encompassing representational aspects (identity formations and frameworks), expressive dimensions (language use, multilingual practices, and translanguaging), and operational facets (e.g., contrasting (non)economic actions as entrepreneurship and active leisure). These elements serve as mechanisms facilitating transition, engagement, resistance, and the expression of flexible ethnic boundary-making, cultural pluralism, and the maintenance of difference through auto-exoticism as exemplified by the studied population groups. This monograph is valuable for sociologists, migration scholars, social linguists, researchers of cultural studies and Eastern Europe interested in understanding the correlation between historical events and East-West European migration processes during the transition period of the Soviet and post-Soviet space.


List of contents

Chapter 1: Conceptualizing Immigrant Agency An Introduction.- Chapter 2: Post Soviet Immigrant Population Between the 1990s to 2000s.- Chapter 3: Personal Transitions amidst Shifting Societal Landscapes.- Chapter 4: Human Agency between Conceptual Morass and Mosaics.- Chapter 5: Agency through the Prism of Long Term Migration.- Chapter 6: Crafting the Methodological Framework.- Chapter 7: Multimethod Empirical Approach.- Chapter 8: Balancing Acts Self Identification and Identity Formations.- Chapter 9: CoMigrant Identity Frameworks Semantic Complexities and Perceptions.- Chapter 10: Language Use An Individual and Group Perspective.- Chapter 11: Language as a Norm and as a Deviation.- Chapter 12: Migrant Businesses and Post Soviet Migration.- Chapter 13: Nourishing Culinary Memories through Consumption.- Chapter 14: Scheherazade an Immigrant Dancing Group.- Chapter 15: Fostering Group Unity and Integration.- Chapter 16: Community Engagement and Networks.- Chapter 17: Immigrant Agency Theory Conceptual Foundations and Practical Implications.

About the author










Tetiana Havlin is a sociologist, researcher, visiting professor and chair for Intercultural Studies at Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus-Senftenberg, Germany. Previously, she worked as a research associate in the 5183 DFG Research Unit Transborder Mobility and Institutional Dynamics at the University of Siegen, where she completed this monograph as a habilitation project. Her key research areas are migration and transnationalism research, empirical social research, and cultural sociology as well as gender and intersectionality studies.


Summary

This open access book explores the dynamics of human agency within the complex context of settlement-oriented immigration through an in-depth case study of immigrants from the former Soviet Union who embarked on their journey to Germany during the 1990s and early 2000s. Employing a transnational lens and an interpretive approach, the book presents a novel empirically grounded Immigrant Agency Theory. Bridging the realms of integration and transnationalism, the Immigrant Agency Theory is a multifaceted analytical tool encompassing representational aspects (identity formations and frameworks), expressive dimensions (language use, multilingual practices, and translanguaging), and operational facets (e.g., contrasting (non)economic actions as entrepreneurship and active leisure). These elements serve as mechanisms facilitating transition, engagement, resistance, and the expression of flexible ethnic boundary-making, cultural pluralism, and the maintenance of difference through auto-exoticism as exemplified by the studied population groups. This monograph is valuable for sociologists, migration scholars, social linguists, researchers of cultural studies and Eastern Europe interested in understanding the correlation between historical events and East-West European migration processes during the transition period of the Soviet and post-Soviet space.

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