Individual Planning or Adaptation: Personal Destinies of Non-Estonians in the Period of Socio-Economic Reforms of the 1990s in Estonia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.3.2.08Keywords:
Personal destinies, Adaptation, Post-socialist structural changes, Social networks, Non-EstoniansAbstract
The aim of this paper is to analyze the interrelationship between structural changes and personal destinies of non-Estonians. How do non-Estonians who have grown up in a socialist system and have finished their education in the late 1980s or early 1990s experience a societal transformation? Were structural and institutional changes brought about by a minimum of adaptations and fluctuations or a by maximum of turbulence and mobility? How successful were they in converting resources gained in the old system into other types of assets in post-socialist conditions? The paper is based on in-depth interviews conducted in 2003 and 2004 with non-Estonians graduating from secondary educational institutions in 1983 and belonging to the so-called “winners” cohort. One of the central results of the analysis is that non-Estonians’ behaviour was not so much directed by purposeful biographical projects but rather it could be characterized as an adaptation to new circumstances. Opportunities proved to be less a matter of individual control and planning than of unfavourable structural conditions. Our analysis indicated the stability of relative rankings in social hierarchy despite the huge amount of job moves. It was evident that having only higher education did not guarantee non-Estonians a stable position in the labour market. Broad social network helped to realize this resource.
Downloads
References
Aasland, Aadne and Tone Fløtten (2001) “Ethnicity and Social Exclusion in Estonia and Latvia.” Europe-Asia Studies 33:1023-1049.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09668130120085029
Andersen, Erik Andre (1997) “The legal status of Russians in Estonian privatization legislation 1989-1995.” Europe-Asia Studies 49:303-316.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09668139708412441
Arro, Reelika, Raul Eamets, Janno Järve, Epp Kallaste and Kaia Philips (2001) “Labour Market Flexibility and Employment Security. Estonia.” Employment Paper 25. Geneva: International Labour Office.
Google Scholar
Åslund, Anders (1996) “Possible Future Directions for Economies in Transition.” Pp. 453-470 in Transforming Post-Communist Political Economies, edited by J. M. Nelson, C. Tilly and L. Walker. Washington: National Academy Press.
Google Scholar
Borsos-Torstila, Julianna (1997) “Foreign direct investment and technology transfer: results of a Survey in selected branches in Estonia.” Discussion Papers no. 580 of the Research Institute of the Finnish Economy. Helsinki, Finland.
Google Scholar
Burt, Ronald (1998) “The gender of social capital.” Rationality and Society 10:5–46.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/104346398010001001
Dey, Ian (2004) “Grounded Theory.” Pp- 80-93 in Qualitative Research Practice, edited by Clive Seale, Giampetro Gobo, Jaber F. Gubrium and David Silverman. London, Thousand Oaks, New Dehli: Sage.
Google Scholar
Diewald, Martin, Anne Goedicke and Karl Ulrich Mayer (2006) “Unusual Turbulences – Unexpected Continuities: Transformation Life Courses in Retrospective.” Pp. 293-317 in After the Fall of the Wall. Life Courses in the Transformation of East Germany, edited by M. Diewald, A. Goedicke and K. Ul. Mayer. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvr0qrtz.18
Diewald, Martin and Jörg Lüdicke (2006) “Community Lost or Freedom Gained? Changes of Social Networks After 1989.” Pp. 191-213 in After the Fall of the Wall. Life Courses in the Transformation of East Germany, edited by M. Diewald, A. Goedicke and K. U. Mayer. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9780804752084.003.0009
Eamets, Raul (2001) Reallocation of labor during transition equilibrium and policy issues: the case of Estonia. Tartu: Tartu University Press.
Google Scholar
Estonian Human Development Report (1997) Tallinn: UNDP. Retrieved June 20, 2007 http://lin2.tlu.ee/~teap/nhdr/1999/EIA99eng.pdf
Google Scholar
Evans, Geoffrey and Christine Lipsmeyer (2001) “The Democratic Experience in Divided Societies: The Baltic States in Comparative Perspective.” Journal of Baltic Studies 32:379-401.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/01629770100000161
Flick, Uwe (2006) An Introduction to Qualitative Research. London, Thousand Oaks, New Dehli: Sage.
Google Scholar
Gershuny, Jonathan (1998) “Thinking dynamically: sociology and narrative data.” Pp. 35-48 in The Dynamics of Modern Society. Poverty, Policy and Welfare, edited by L. Leisering and R. Walker. Bristol: The Policy Press.
Google Scholar
Goedicke, Anne (2006) “Firms and Fortune: The Consequences of Privatization and Reorganization.” Pp. 89-115 in After the Fall of the Wall. Life Courses in the Transformation of East Germany, edited by Martin Diewald, Anne Goedicke and Karl Ulrich Mayer. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9780804752084.003.0005
Grøgaard, Jens B., editor (1996) “Estonia in the Grip of Change.” Fafo Report 190. Oslo: Fafo Institute for Applied Social Science.
Google Scholar
Hallik, Klara (1998) “Non-Estonians: Historical and Demographical Background.” Pp. 13-27 in Russian Minority and Challenges for Estonia, edited by Mati Heidmets. Tallinn: Tallinn Pedagogical University.
Google Scholar
Hallik, Klara (1999) “Ethnically divided Estonia.” Pp. 40-45 in Estonian Human Development Report, edited by Raivo Vetik. Tallinn: UNDP.
Google Scholar
Hallik, Klara (2002) “Nationalising Policies and Integration Challenges.” Pp. 65-88 in The Challenge of the Russian Minority. Emerging Multicultural Democracy in Estonia, edited by Marju Lauristin and Mati Heidmets. Tartu: Tartu University Press.
Google Scholar
Hallik, Klara and Marika Kirch (1992) “On Interethnic Relations in Estonia.” Pp. 149-160 in In a Collapsing Empire – Underdevelopment, Ethnic Conflict and Nationalism in the Soviet Union, edited by M. Buttini. Gianciacomo Fetrinelli Annali Fondazione.
Google Scholar
Hanley, Eric (2000) “Self-employment in post-communist Eastern Europe: a refuge from poverty or road to riches?” Communist and Post-communist Studies 23:379-402.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0967-067X(00)00012-X
Hansson, Leeni (2001) Networks Matter: The Role of Informal Social Network in the Period of Socio-Economic Reforms of the 1990s in Estonia. Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä.
Google Scholar
Helemäe, Jelena and Ellu Saar. (1995) “National Reconstruction and Social Restratification.” Nationalities Papers 23 (1):127-140.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/00905999508408355
Helemäe, Jelena, Ellu Saar and Rein Vöörmann (2000) Kas haridusse tasus investeerida (Returns to Education). Tallinn: Teaduste Akadeemia Kirjastus.
Google Scholar
Helemäe, Jelena, Ellu Saar and Rein Vöörmann (1999) “Job Mobility in Estonia: What Has Changed in 1989-1994.” Pp. 56-71 in Estonian Labour Market and Labour Market Policy, edited by Raul Eamets. Viljandi, Tartu: Ministry of Social Affairs.
Google Scholar
Hoerning, Erika M., editor (2000) Biographische Sozialisation. Stuttgart: Lucius & Lucius.
Google Scholar
Indicators of Sustainable Development (2002) Estonian National Report on Sustainable Development. Tallinn: Statistical Office of Estonia.
Google Scholar
Kala, Kulno (1992) “Eesti rahvuslikust koosseisust pärast Teist Maailmasõda.” (Ethnic Composition of Estonia After the Second World War). Akadeemia 4:508-535.
Google Scholar
Kaplan, Cynthia S. (2001) “Book Review, Erik Andre Andersen. An Ethnic Perspective on Economic Reform: The Case of Estonia.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 24:157-158.
Google Scholar
Kazjulja, Margarita (2001) “Kuidas saada hea töö: sidemete olulisus sajandilõpu tööturul.” (How to get a good job: the role of social network in the Estonian labour
Google Scholar
market) Pp. 108-125 in Trepist alla ja üles: Edukad ja ebaedukad postsotsialistlikus Eestis (Success and failure in post-socialist Estonia), edited by Ellu Saar. Tallinn: Teaduste Akadeemia Kirjastus.
Google Scholar
Kennedy, Michael (2002) Cultural Formations of Postcommunism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Google Scholar
Kupferberg, Felix (1998) “Transformation as Biographical Experience. Personal Destinies of East Berlin Graduates Before and After Unification.” Acta Sociologica 41:243–267.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/00016999850080087
Laitin, David D. (1998) Identity in Formation: The Russian-Speaking Populations in the Near Abroad. Ithaca, London: Cornell University Press.
Google Scholar
Mach, Bogdan W., Karl Ulrich Mayer and Michal Pohoski (1994) “Job Changes in the Federal Republic of Germany and Poland: A Longitudinal Assessment of the Impact of Welfare-Capitalist and State-Socialist Labour-Market Segmentation.” European Sociological Review 10:1-28.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.esr.a036311
Mayer, Karl Ulrich (2004) “Whose Lives? How History, Societies and Institutions Define and Shape Life Courses.” Research in Human Development 1:161-187.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1207/s15427617rhd0103_3
Mayer, Karl Ulrich (2006) “After the Fall of the Wall: Living Through the Post-Socialist Transformation in East Germany.” Pp. 1-28 in After the Fall of the Wall. Life Courses in the Transformation of East Germany, edited by Martin Diewald, Anne Goedicke and Karl Ulrich Mayer. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9780804752084.003.0001
Mayer, Karl Ulrich; Martin Diewald and Heike Solga (1999) “Transition to Post-Communism in East Germany: Worklife Mobility of Women and Men between 1989 and 1993.” Acta Sociologica 42:35-53.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/000169939904200103
de Melo, Martha; Cevdet Denizer and Alan Gelb (1996) “From Plan to Market: Patterns of Transition.” World Bank Policy Research Working Paper no 1564.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511572012.003
Narusk Anu and Leeni Hansson. (1999) Estonian Families in the 1990s: Winners and Losers. Tallinn: Estonian Academy Publishers.
Google Scholar
Orazem, Peter F. and Milan Vodopivec (1995) “Winners and Losers in Transition: returns to Education, Experience, and Gender in Slovenia.” The World Bank Economic Review 9(2):201-230.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/wber/9.2.201
Pavelson, Marje and Mai Luuk (2002) “Non-Estonians on the Labour Market: A Change in the Economic Model and Differences in Social Capital.” Pp. 89-116 in The Challenge of the Russian Minority. Emerging Multicultural Democracy in Estonia, edited by Marju Lauristin and Mati Heidmets. Tartu: Tartu University Press.
Google Scholar
Pettai, Vello. (1996) “Estonia’s Controversial Language Policies.” Transition 29.
Google Scholar
Pettai, Vello and Klara Hallik (2002) “Understanding processes of ethnic control: segmentation, dependency and co-optation in post-communist Estonia.” Nations and Nationalism 8:505-529.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1469-8219.00063
Pettai, Ülle (2001) “Labor Market.” Pp. 43-49 in Social Trends 2001, edited by Rein Vöörmann. Tallinn: Estonian Statistical Office.
Google Scholar
Poverty in Transition (1998) “Poverty in Transition.” United Nations Development Program. New York: Regional Bureau for Europe and the CIS.
Google Scholar
Puur, Allan (2000) “Economic Activity in Transition: Population of Foreign Origin in Estonia in the 1990s.” Trames 4:286-316.
Google Scholar
Róna-Tas, Akos (1998) “Path Dependence and Capital Theory: Sociology of the Post-Communist Economic Transformation.” East European Politics and Societies 12:107-123.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0888325498012001005
Rosenthal, Gabriele (2004) “Biographical Research.” Pp. 48-64 in Qualitative Research Practice, edited by Clive Seale, Giampetro Gobo, Jaber F. Gubrium and David Silverman. London, Thousand Oaks, New Dehli: Sage.
Google Scholar
Rutkowski, Jan (2003) “Rapid Labor Reallocation with a Stagnant Unemployment Pool: The Puzzle of the Labor Market in Lithuania.” Policy Research Working Paper, WPS 2946. The World Bank.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-2946
Rõõm, Marit (2002) “Unemployment and Labour Mobility in Estonia: Analysis Using Duration Models.” Working Papers no 7. Tallinn: Bank of Estonia.
Google Scholar
Saar, Ellu (1997) “Transitions to Tertiary Education in Belarus and the Baltic Countries.” European Sociological Review 13:139-158.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.esr.a018209
Saar, Ellu and Jelena Helemäe (2001) “Ethnic Segmentation in Estonian Labour Market.” Paper presented at the 5th Conference of the European Sociological Association, August 28, Helsinki, Finland.
Google Scholar
Saar, Ellu and Margarita Kazjulja (2002) “Problems of putting education to best use.” The Baltic Review 21:30-32.
Google Scholar
Saar, Ellu and Marge Unt (2006) “Self-employment in Estonia: forced move or voluntary engagement?” Europe-Asia Studies 58:415-437.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09668130600601842
Solga, Heike (2006) “The Rise of Meritocracy? Class Mobility in East Germany Before and After 1989.” Pp. 140-169 in After the Fall of the Wall. Life Courses in the Transformation of East Germany, edited by Martin Diewald, Anne Goedicke and Karl Ulrich Mayer. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9780804752084.003.0007
Tallo, Annika and Erik Terk (1998) “The Generations in Estonia’s Transition Period.” Pp. 14-17 in Estonian Human Development Report, edited by E. Terk. Tallinn: UNDP.
Google Scholar
Terk, Erik (1999) “Estonia’s Economic Development: Achievements, Conflicts. Prospects.” Pp. 60-66 in Estonian Human Development Report 1999, edited by Raivo Vetik. Tallinn: UNDP.
Google Scholar
Titma, Mikk; Tuma, Nancy Brandon and Brian D. Silver (1998) “Winners and Losers in the Post-Communist Transition: New Evidence From Estonia.” Post-Soviet Affairs 14 (2):114-136.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/1060586X.1998.10641449
Titma, Mikk, editor (1999) Kolmekümneaastaste põlvkonna sotsiaalne portree (Social Portrait of a Generation in their Thirties). Tartu-Tallinn: Estonian Academy Publishers.
Google Scholar
Večernik, Jiri and Petr Matějů (1999) Ten Years of Rebuilding Capitalism: Czech society after 1989. Prague: Academia.
Google Scholar
Vodopiveč, Milan (2000) “Worker Reallocation During Estonia’s Transition to Market: How Efficient and How Equitable?” World Bank Social Protection Discussion Paper No. 0018. The World Bank.
Google Scholar
Völker, Beate and Henk Flap (2001) “Weak Ties as a Liability.” Rationality and Society 13(4):397-428.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/104346301013004001
Vöörmann, Rein and Jelena Helemäe (2003) “Ethnic relations in Estonia’s post-Soviet business community.” Ethnicities 3 (4):509-530.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1468796803003004004
World Bank Report (2001) ”Transition. The First Ten years. Analysis and Lessons for Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union.” Washington, D.C.
Google Scholar
Zaslavsky, Victor (1992) “The Evolution of Separatism in Soviet Union under Gorbachev.” Pp. 71-97 in From Union to Commonwealth: Nationalism and Separatism in the Soviet Republics, edited by G.W. Lapidus, V. Zaslavsky, and P. Goldman. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Google Scholar
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511559242.007
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.