ABSTRACT

Following the demise of the USSR in 1991, and the ensuing collapse of communist regimes in Eastern Europe, widespread population movements took place across Central and Eastern Europe. Whole nations disappeared and (re)-emerged and diasporic transnational ties and belonging have experienced a revival. This book explores some of the many different facets of diasporic life and migration across Central and Eastern Europe by specifically employing the concept of cosmopolitanism. It examines aspects of migrants’ everyday lives and identities, considers some of the difficulties faced by migrant minorities in being accepted and integrated in the host societies, but also examines questions of citizenship and diasporic politics.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

East European diasporas, migration and cosmopolitanism

part |30 pages

Part I The past in the present

chapter |12 pages

1 Cosmopolitanism in practice

Perspectives on the Nansen passports

chapter |16 pages

2 Between long-distance nationalism and ‘rooted' cosmopolitanism?

Armenian-American engagement with their homeland

part |33 pages

Part II Making and re-making diasporas from former Yugoslavia

part |30 pages

Part III Locating diaspora in and beyond Germany

part |33 pages

Part IV Exploring ethical challenges in research on migration

chapter |16 pages

7 The beginning and end of a beautiful friendship

Ethical issues in the ethnographic study of sociality amongst Russian-speaking migrants in London

chapter |15 pages

8 Facets of migrant identity

Ethical dilemmas in research among Romanian migrants in the UK