27 research outputs found
âInnen az ember jobb, hogyha meg is szabadulâ. MegĂ©lhetĂ©si stratĂ©giĂĄk egy kisfalusi cigĂĄny közössĂ©gben
LĂĄposon ma a 70 aktĂv korĂș cigĂĄny szĂĄrmazĂĄsĂș fĂ©rfi közĂŒl senkinek sincs ĂĄllandĂł munkaviszonya. A parasztoknĂĄl ez az arĂĄny egĂ©szen mĂĄskĂ©nt fest: nĂĄluk 30 munkakĂ©pes korban lĂ©vĆ lakosra 4 munkanĂ©lkĂŒli jut. Ćk azonban âmĂ©g csakâ 2-3 Ă©ve vesztettĂ©k el ĂĄllĂĄsaikat, ellentĂ©tben a cigĂĄnyokkal, akiknek többsĂ©ge 1991-ben vĂĄlt munkanĂ©lkĂŒlivĂ©, az elsĆ nagy hullĂĄmban, amikor a gazdasĂĄgi nehĂ©zsĂ©gekkel kĂŒzdĆ nagyipari vĂĄllalatok kezdtĂ©k elbocsĂĄtani a feleslegessĂ© vĂĄlt munkaerĆt, közĂŒlĂŒk is elsĆsorban a szakkĂ©pzetlen, vidĂ©ki, ingĂĄzĂł cigĂĄnyokat. Az elszegĂ©nyedĆ, gettĂłsodĂł, lassan 10 Ă©ve tartĂł munkanĂ©lkĂŒlisĂ©ggel kĂŒzdĆ faluban, ahol ma az aktĂv lakossĂĄg 60 szĂĄzalĂ©ka munkanĂ©lkĂŒli (ebbĆl 90 szĂĄzalĂ©k a cigĂĄnyok arĂĄnya), a kĂŒlönbözĆ tĂĄrsadalmi rĂ©tegeknek kĂŒlönbözĆ megĂ©lhetĂ©si stratĂ©giĂĄi vannak
HĂĄtrĂĄnyos helyzetƱ kistĂ©rsĂ©gek nĂ©pesedĂ©si viszonyai, kĂŒlönös tekintettel egyes etnikai kĂŒlönbsĂ©gek vizsgĂĄlatĂĄra = Population development in less developed subregions in Hungary with special attention to some ethnic differences
A projekt keretĂ©ben differenciĂĄlis nĂ©pesedĂ©si kutatĂĄsokat folytattunk a terĂŒleti egyenlĆtlensĂ©gek Ă©s a nĂ©pesedĂ©si viszonyok összefĂŒggĂ©seinek feltĂĄrĂĄsĂĄra. A kutatĂĄsi periĂłdus elsĆ felĂ©ben kistĂ©rsĂ©gi szintƱ demogrĂĄfiai adatokat gyƱjtöttĂŒnk Ă©s dolgoztunk fel. Az elemzĂ©s sorĂĄn megĂĄllapĂthatĂł volt, hogy a legtöbb tĂ©rsĂ©gben a hĂĄtrĂĄnyok Ă©s az azok kiegyenlĂtĆdĂ©sĂ©t gĂĄtlĂł tĂĄrsadalmi-demogrĂĄfiai tĂ©nyezĆk halmozottan jelentkeznek. Nem azonosĂthatĂłk regionĂĄlis demogrĂĄfiai profilok, azonban bizonyos nĂ©pesedĂ©si jellemzĆk egyĂŒttesen csak az Ă©szaki orszĂĄgrĂ©szben fordulnak elĆ. A projekt mĂĄsodik felĂ©ben kvantitatĂv adatfelvĂ©telt kĂ©szĂtettĂŒnk egy Ă©szak-magyarorszĂĄgi halmozottan hĂĄtrĂĄnyos helyzetƱ tĂ©rsĂ©gben annak vizsgĂĄlatĂĄra, hogy mi ĂĄllhat az erre a tĂ©rsĂ©gre jellemzĆ magas termĂ©kenysĂ©g hĂĄtterĂ©ben, hogy vajon az alacsony iskolĂĄzottsĂĄg hasonlĂł termĂ©kenysĂ©gi mintĂĄkhoz kapcsolĂłdik-e az itt Ă©lĆ roma Ă©s nem-roma nĆk esetĂ©ben. EredmĂ©nyeink szerint a vizsgĂĄlt tĂ©rsĂ©gben a termĂ©kenysĂ©g a rendszervĂĄltĂĄs elĆtt csökkent, jelenleg stagnĂĄl. A vizsgĂĄlt tĂ©rsĂ©gben mind a roma, mind a nem-roma nĂ©pessĂ©g termĂ©kenysĂ©ge magasabb volt annĂĄl, mint amit az alacsony vĂ©gzettsĂ©gƱekre szĂĄmĂtott orszĂĄgos ĂĄtlag alapjĂĄn vĂĄrni lehetett. A vĂĄrakozĂĄsnak megfelelĆen a roma nĆk magasabb gyermekszĂĄma rĂ©szben az alacsonyabb iskolĂĄzottsĂĄgukkal volt magyarĂĄzhatĂł, de emellett az ĂĄltalĂĄnos iskolĂĄt vĂ©gzettek esetĂ©ben ? minden egyĂ©b tĂ©nyezĆ kontrollĂĄlĂĄsa mellett ? az etnicitĂĄs önĂĄllĂł hatĂĄsa is kimutathatĂł volt a szĂŒlt gyermekszĂĄmra. | The aim of the study was to analyse the relationship between socio-economic inequalities appearing in regional differences and population development. In the first year a subregional level database on various socio-economic and population development indicators was created. By cluster analysis significant differences in the demographic patterns of the most privileged subregions have been showed up. In the second year a questionnaire survey was taken among the female population of a multiply-disadvantaged area in North Hungary in order to examine what lay behind the high fertility typical of the area. We were particularly interested in whether low educational level is connected to similar fertility patterns among Romas and non-Romas living there. Fertility among both the Roma and non-Roma populations in this region was found to be higher than might be expected from the national average calculated for people of low educational level. The number of children among people living here decreased considerably before 1990, especially among the Romas, but the trend now seems to be stagnating. As for the effect of ethnicity on fertility, the examination by level of education had some surprising results. As expected, the higher level of fertility among Romas could partly be explained by their lower educational level. However, for those who had completed primary school the effect of ethnicity on the number of children born has also been demonstrated
Constrained choices, enhanced aspirations: Transnational mobility, poverty and development. A case study from North Hungary
This paper aims to contribute to the exploration of the nexus of poverty, migration and development by providing what has been lacking thus far; namely, a close ethnographic portrait, combined with a survey, that interprets the most typical and diverging migration trajectories and their impacts in an economically backward and ethnically differentiated region in Hungary. Building on the inspirational work of anthropologists and mobility scholars who propose to recover a global and multidimensional perspective on transnational movement when exploring the nexus between migration and its consequences for development, we carried out multi-sited ethnography, both in the sending and in the destination localities. We also conducted a survey among migrants who had returned, sometimes temporarily, to their community of origin. Using this multi-spatial approach, we demonstrate the different layers of the migration-development nexus. We argue that, on the global level, receiving countries all benefit from the cheap and flexible labor of poor migrants, be they Roma or non-Roma, skilled or low-skilled mobile laborers. However, on the level of migrant-sending localities, due to the differential migration patterns of local Roma and non-Roma, the developmental effects of the two groupsâ geographical movement cannot be taken as homogeneous or leveled. For non-Roma families, when men leave behind their wives and children for the sake of financial betterment of their family, there is little developmental effect on community level, but only in a narrow financial sense. However, we argue, drawing on Appaduraiâs (2004) âcapacity to aspireâ concept, that for a fraction of some kinship groups of low-skilled Roma who mainly migrate with their whole family, transnational mobility may not be as successful financially as for the non-Roma, although it has future-oriented developmental elements by potentially enhancing capacity to aspire for both migrants and non-migrants
Soul Work and Giving Back: Ethnic Support Groups and the Hidden Costs of Social Mobility. Lessons from Hungarian Roma Graduates
For a long time, social and public policies have presented upward social mobility as an unambiguously progressive process. However, there is a relatively new line of academic research that concerns the dilemmas, or âhidden costsâ, of upward mobility. Still, apart from a few inspiring exceptions, there is a lack of empirical studies, especially in Hungary, that explore the personal experiences of the impact of moving class through educational mobility. Academic literature about stigmatised, disadvantaged minorities such as Afro-Americans and Mexicans in the U.S or the Roma in Europe suggests that the professional middle class of these groups â those who have demonstrated an exceptional range of intergenerational mobility â have adopted a distinctive upward mobility strategy to overcome the challenges that are unique to them. These challenges emerge from the difficulties of maintaining intra-class relations with poorer âco-ethnicsâ (people from the communities they were brought up in), but also managing interethnic relations with the âwhiteâ (non-Black in the U.S, non-Roma in East-Central Europe) majority. As part of this minority culture of mobility, the Roma, as with other stigmatised minority groups, create and join ethnic professional organisations to enable them to culturally navigate both worlds. Throughout this paper, we focus our attention on influential ethnic support groups or organisations and address the question what effect they have on the costs of upward mobility in the case of our Roma professional middle-class sample.</jats:p
The Limits of Trading Cultural Capital: Returning Migrant Children and Their Educational Trajectory in Hungary
Purpose: This chapter analyses the effects of social stratification and inequalities on the outcomes of transnational mobilities, especially on the educational
trajectory of returning migrant children.
Study approach: It places the Bourdieusian capital concepts (Bourdieu, 1977,
1984) centre stage, and analyses the convertibility or transferability of the
cultural and social capital across different transnational locations. It examines
the serious limitations of this process, using the concept of non-dominant cultural capital as a heuristic analytical tool and the education system (school) as
a way of approaching the field. As we examine âsuccessful mobilitiesâ of highstatus families with children and racialised low-status families experiencing mobility failures, our intention is to draw attention on the effect of the starting
position of the migrating families on the outcomes of their cross-border mobilities through a closer reading of insightful cases. We look at the interrelations
of social position or class race and mobility experiences through several empirical case studies from different regions of Hungary by examining the narratives
of people belonging to very different social strata with a focus on the âtopâ and
the âbottomâ of the socio-economic hierarchy. We examine the transnational
mobility trajectories, strategies and the reintegration of school age children
from transnationally mobile families upon their return to Hungary.
Findings: Our qualitative research indicates that for returning migrants not
only their available capitals in a Bourdieasian sense but also their (de)valuation by
the different Hungarian schools has direct consequences on mobility-affected
educational trajectories, on the individual outcomes of mobilities, and the
circumstances of return and chances for reintegration.
Originality: There is little qualitative research on the effects of emigration
from Hungary in recent decades. A more recent edited volume (VĂĄradi, 2018)
discusses various intersectionalities of migration such as gender, ethnicity and
age. This chapter intends to advance this line of research, analysing the intersectionality of class, ethnicity and race in the context of spatial mobilities
through operationalising a critical reading of the Bourdieusian capital