ABSTRACT

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.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Informality — enduring practices, entwined livelihoods

part 1|100 pages

‘Entrepreneurial' informality? Self- and off-the-books employment

chapter 2|16 pages

The story of Šarūnas

An Invisible Citizen of Lithuania 1

chapter 3|16 pages

Moonlighting strangers met on the way

The nexus of informality and blue-collar sociality in Russia

chapter 5|17 pages

Drinking with Vova

An individual entrepreneur between illegality and informality

chapter 6|17 pages

When is an illicit taxi driver more than a taxi driver?

Case studies from transit and trucking in post-socialist Slovakia

part 2|68 pages

At home abroad? Transnational Informality and the invisible flows of people and goods

chapter 7|14 pages

From shuttle trader to businesswomen

The informal bazaar economy in Kyrgyzstan

chapter 8|17 pages

‘Business as casual'

Shuttle trade on the Belarus-Lithuania border 1

chapter 10|22 pages

Informal economy writ large and small

From Azerbaijani herb traders to Moscow shop owners 1