The role of the digital diaspora in overcoming the vulnerabilities of migrants under the covid-19 pandemic (the case of Moldovan migrants)

Cover Page

Cite item

Abstract

Contemporary information-communication technologies contribute to the development of the quasi-institution ‘transnational migrant community’ in the form of digital diaspora. It has several functions: maintaining ties with the country of origin, ensuring transnational interaction, constructing the identity of migrants, consolidating their ethnic community and social adaptation, expressing the subjectivity of the diaspora in the public sphere, psycho-emotional support. The relevance of the study of the digital diaspora’s role in overcoming vulnerabilities of migrants under the pandemic is determined by the need to consider the adaptation of migrants in the context of the transformation of migrations and the use of contemporary information-communication technologies by migrants. The object of the study is the online groups of Moldovan migrants, which are characterized by the rapid institutionalization of diaspora organizations. The authors focus on the mechanisms of social adaptation of Moldovan migrants, which serve to overcome their vulnerabilities and risks under the pandemic with information-communication technologies. The study is based on the concept “digital diaspora” and the secondary analysis of the data from the Representative Office of the International Organization for Migration in Moldova on the Internet practices of Moldovan migrants (2017) and on the situation of migrants under the pandemic (2020). The main research method is the analysis of the content of the largest Internet groups of Moldovan migrants in the social network with the techniques “problem tree” and “decision tree”. The study showed that during the pandemic, the Internet groups of Moldovan migrants became a platform for their self-organization and overcoming vulnerabilities, and also performed informational, organizational, representative, mobilization and recreational functions. The authors believe that the experience of the Internet groups of Moldovan migrants can be extrapolated to other migrant communities and other contexts supporting the political, economic and social-cultural subjectivity of migrants.

About the authors

S. V. Ryazantsev

Institute for Demographic Research of FCTAS RAS; RUDN University

Email: riazan@mail.ru

доктор экономических наук, член-корреспондент Российской академии наук, директор Института демографических исследований Федерального научно-исследовательского социологического центра Российской академии наук; профессор кафедры международных экономических отношений Российского университета дружбы народов

Fotievoy St., 6-1, Moscow, 119333, Russia; 6 Miklukho-Maklaya St., Moscow, 117198, Russia

O. A. Volkova

Institute for Demographic Research of FCTAS RAS

Email: volkovaoa@rambler.ru

доктор социологических наук, главный научный сотрудник Института демографических исследований

Fotievoy St., 6-1, Moscow, 119333, Russia

A. N. Ostavnaia

Shevchenko Pridnestrovian State University

Author for correspondence.
Email: alaost@rambler.ru

старший преподаватель кафедры социологии и социальных технологий

25 October St., 128, Tiraspol, 347250, Moldova

References

  1. Basch L.G., Glick Schiller N., Szanton Blanc C. Nations Unbound: Transnational Projects, Postcolonial Predicaments, and Deterritorialized Nation-States. Langhorne; 1994.
  2. Brinkerhoff J. Digital Diasporas: Identity and Transnational Engagement. Cambridge; 2009.
  3. Brinkerhoff J.M. Digital diasporas’ challenge to traditional power: The case of Tibet Board. Review of International Studies. 2011; 38.
  4. Cheianu-Andrei D. Mapping of the Moldovan Diaspora in Italy, Portugal, France and the United Kingdom. Chisinau; 2013.
  5. Ciobanu R., Rosca M. Moldovan diaspora’s social networks: Political mobilization and participation. Central and Eastern European EDem and EGov Days. 2020; 338.
  6. Dekker R., Engbersen G. How social media transform migrant networks and facilitate migration. Global Networks. 2013; 14. (4).
  7. Diamandaki K. Virtual ethnicity and digital diasporas: Identity construction in cyberspace. Global Media Journal. 2003; 2.
  8. Diker E. Social media and migration. URL: http://ps-europe.org/social-media-and-migration.
  9. Everett A. Digital Diaspora: A Race for Cyberspace. Albany; 2009.
  10. Filiz G., Asad A.L. Migrant networks. Emerging trends in the social and behavioral sciences: An interdisciplinary, searchable, and linkable resource. URL: doi: 10.1002/9781118900772. etrds0220.
  11. Guadagno L. Migrants and the covid-19 pandemic: An initial analysis. Migration Research Series. 2020; 60.
  12. Komito L. Social media and migration: Virtual community 2.0. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. 2011; 62 (2).
  13. Massey D. A synthetic theory of international migration. World in the Mirror of International Migration. 2002; 1.
  14. McLuhan M., Powers B.R. The Global Village: Transformations in World Life and Media in the 21st Century. New York; 1992.
  15. Meeteren M.J., Pereira S. The differential role of social networks. Strategies and routes in Brazilian migration to Portugal and the Netherlands. Citizenship, Migration & the City. 2013; 66.
  16. Mosneaga V. Mapping Moldovan diaspora in Germany, UK, Israel, Italy, Portugal and Russia. Chisinau; 2017.
  17. Mukomel V., Cheianu-Andrei D. Moldovans in the Russian Federation: Socio-Economic Profile and Policy Challenges. Chisinau; 2013.
  18. Ostavnaia A. Mapping Migration from Transnistria. Chisinau; 2017.
  19. Vladicescu N. Cartografierea asociațiilor din diasporă. Studiu sociologic. Chisinau; 2021.
  20. Volkova O., Besschetnova O., Ostavnaja A. Distance education as a way of saving ethnic and cultural identity of migrant children. International Scientific Conference “eLearning and Software for Education”. 2017; 1.
  21. Anderson B. Voobrazhayemye soobshchestva [Imagined Communities]. Moscow; 2001. (In Russ.).
  22. Bourdieu P. Formy kapitala [Forms of capital]. Ekonomicheskaya Sotsiologiya. 2002; 3 (5). (In Russ.).
  23. Volkov Yu.G., Kurbatov V.I. Tsifrovaya diaspora migrantov: k voprosu o metodologii issledovaniya [Digital diaspora of migrants: On the research methodology]. Gumanitariy Yuga Rossii. 2020; 9 (5). (In Russ.).
  24. Glukhov A.P., Kuzheleva-Sagan I.P. Novye kontseptualnye ramki issledovaniy “tsifrovizatsii” migratsii i diaspor: ot marginala k “podklyuchennomu” k seti [A new conceptual framework for the study of the “digitalization” of migration and diasporas: From the marginal to the “connected”]. “Tsifrovyye diaspory” migrantov iz Tsentralnoy Azii: virtualnaya setevaya organizatsiya, diskurs “voobrazhaemogo soobshchestva” i konkurentsiya identichnostey. Tomsk; 2016. (In Russ.).
  25. Demchenko E.V. Rol elektronnyh SMI i sotsialnyh media v sozdanii novoy kommunikativnoy sredy diaspory (na primere udmurtov) [The role of the electronic mass media and social media in creating a new communicative environment for the diaspora (on the example of the Udmurts)]. Chelovechesky Kapital. 2017; 10. (In Russ.).
  26. Iskhakova L.G. Gibridnye identichnosti predstaviteley diaspor: keys tatar v SShA [Hybrid identities of diasporas’ representatives: The Tatar case in the US]. Diskussiya. 2017; 11. (In Russ.).
  27. Castells M. Galaktika Internet: Razmyshleniya ob Internete, biznese i obshchestve [The Internet Galaxy: Reflections on the Internet, Business and Society]. Ekaterinburg; 2004. (In Russ.).
  28. Ostavnaia A.N. Problemy moldavskih migrantov v usloviyah pandemii covid-19 [Problems of Moldovan migrants under the covid-19 pandemic]. Demograficheskie Issledovaniya. 2021; 1 (2). (In Russ.).
  29. Rocheva A.L., Varshaver E.A., Ivanova N.S. Uyazvimye gruppy v chrezvychaynyh situatsiyah: solidarnost i doverie gosudarstvu kak osnova strategiy migrantov v Rossii vo vremya pandemii covid-19 [Vulnerable groups during disasters: Solidarity and trust to the state as the basis for migrant strategies in Russia under the covid-19 pandemic]. Monitoring Obshchestvennogo Mneniya: Ekonomicheskie i Sotsialnye Peremeny. 2020; 6. (In Russ.).
  30. Ryazantsev S. V., Molodikova I. N., Bragin A. D. Vliyanie pandemii covid-19 na polo-zhenie migrantov na rynkah truda stran SNG [The impact of the covid-19 pandemic on the labor migration in the CIS]. Baltiysky Region. 2020; 12 (4). (In Russ.).
  31. Ryazantsev S.V., Bragin A.D., Ryazantsev N.S. Polozhenie trudovyh migrantov v regi-onah mira: vyzovy pandemii covid-19 i reaktsiya pravitelstv [Situation of labor migrants in the regions of the world: Challenges of the covid-19 pandemic and the response of governments]. Nauchnoe Obozrenie. Seriya 1: Ekonomika i Pravо. 2020; 3. (In Russ.).
  32. Ryazantsev S.V., Vazirov Z.K., Kasymov O.K. Tadzhikskie obshchiny v rossiyskih re-gionah v period pandemii covid-19: zanyatost i solidarnost [Tajik communities in Russian regions during the covid-19 pandemic: Employment and solidarity]. Nauchnoe Obozrenie. Seriya 1: Ekonomika i Pravо. 2021; 1. (In Russ.).
  33. Timoshkin D. Doverie vs dezinformatsiya: ekonomika russkoyazychnyh “migrantskih” grupp v sotsialnyh setyah [Trust vs disorientation: Economy of the Russian-speaking “migrant” groups in the social media]. Ekonomicheskaya Sotsiologiya. 2019; 20 (5). (In Russ.).

Copyright (c) 2022 Ryazantsev S.V., Volkova O.A., Ostavnaia A.N.

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

This website uses cookies

You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.

About Cookies