ABSTRACT

Two decades have now passed since the revolutions of 1989 swept through Eastern Europe and precipitated the collapse of state socialism across the region, engendering a period of massive social, economic and political transformation. This book explores the ways in which young people growing up in post-socialist Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union negotiate a range of identities and transitions in their personal lives against a backdrop of thoroughgoing transformation in their societies. Drawing upon original empirical research in a range of countries, the book's contributors explore the various freedoms and insecurities that have accompanied neo-liberal transformation in post-socialist countries - in spheres as diverse as consumption, migration, political participation, volunteering, employment and family formation - and examine the ways in which they have begun to re-shape different aspects of young people's lives. In addition, while 'social change' is a central theme of the issue, all of the chapters in the collection indicate that the new opportunities and risks faced by young people continue both to underpin and to be shaped by familiar social and spatial divisions, not only within and between the countries addressed, but also between 'East' and 'West'.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Journal of Youth Studies.

chapter |15 pages

The post-revolutionary consumer generation

‘Mainstream' youth and the paradox of choice in the Czech Republic

chapter |15 pages

From ‘inheritance' to individualization

Disembedding working-class youth transitions in post-Soviet Russia

chapter |17 pages

Ukrainian youth and civic engagement

Unconventional participation in local spaces

chapter |16 pages

‘Rocking the vote'

New forms of youth organisations in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union