Migrants of the Future – Serbian Youth between Imaginary and Real Migration
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One of several opinion polls of the student population in Serbia, conducted in May 2008,
revealed that about 78% of the interviewees is ready to leave Serbia immediately after
they get their diploma. Although there are many who declare that they are ready to per manently return to their home country, and certainly a great majority is in one way or
another engaged in a widespread public debate about the issue of emigration, the portion
of those who have already made concrete plans and preparations for leaving is consider ably smaller. Focussing on the wishes and plans of the young for leaving after 2000, I
will try to formulate answers to two questions: first, what is the social and cultural con text of this fervent debate, supposing that the various discourses on youth, at the partic ular moment centred on the migration issue, might in fact represent a part of the wider
process of reconstruction of youth as a social category in postsocialist transformations;
and second, w...hat are the characteristics of the more shadowy process that, in the pri vate arena of family life and family planning, accompanies this more exposed politi cal debate. In short: what kind of home will Serbia become if the young people wish so
strongly to escape from it?
Кључне речи:
student population in Serbia / emigration / social and cultural context of migration issue / youth as a social category in postsocialist transformations / familyИзвор:
Ethnologia Balcanica, 2010, 14, 109-128Издавач:
- LIT Verlag
Институција/група
Etnologija i antropologija / Ethnology and AnthropologyTY - JOUR AU - Erdei, Ildiko PY - 2010 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4263 AB - One of several opinion polls of the student population in Serbia, conducted in May 2008, revealed that about 78% of the interviewees is ready to leave Serbia immediately after they get their diploma. Although there are many who declare that they are ready to per manently return to their home country, and certainly a great majority is in one way or another engaged in a widespread public debate about the issue of emigration, the portion of those who have already made concrete plans and preparations for leaving is consider ably smaller. Focussing on the wishes and plans of the young for leaving after 2000, I will try to formulate answers to two questions: first, what is the social and cultural con text of this fervent debate, supposing that the various discourses on youth, at the partic ular moment centred on the migration issue, might in fact represent a part of the wider process of reconstruction of youth as a social category in postsocialist transformations; and second, what are the characteristics of the more shadowy process that, in the pri vate arena of family life and family planning, accompanies this more exposed politi cal debate. In short: what kind of home will Serbia become if the young people wish so strongly to escape from it? PB - LIT Verlag T2 - Ethnologia Balcanica T1 - Migrants of the Future – Serbian Youth between Imaginary and Real Migration EP - 128 SP - 109 VL - 14 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4263 ER -
@article{ author = "Erdei, Ildiko", year = "2010", abstract = "One of several opinion polls of the student population in Serbia, conducted in May 2008, revealed that about 78% of the interviewees is ready to leave Serbia immediately after they get their diploma. Although there are many who declare that they are ready to per manently return to their home country, and certainly a great majority is in one way or another engaged in a widespread public debate about the issue of emigration, the portion of those who have already made concrete plans and preparations for leaving is consider ably smaller. Focussing on the wishes and plans of the young for leaving after 2000, I will try to formulate answers to two questions: first, what is the social and cultural con text of this fervent debate, supposing that the various discourses on youth, at the partic ular moment centred on the migration issue, might in fact represent a part of the wider process of reconstruction of youth as a social category in postsocialist transformations; and second, what are the characteristics of the more shadowy process that, in the pri vate arena of family life and family planning, accompanies this more exposed politi cal debate. In short: what kind of home will Serbia become if the young people wish so strongly to escape from it?", publisher = "LIT Verlag", journal = "Ethnologia Balcanica", title = "Migrants of the Future – Serbian Youth between Imaginary and Real Migration", pages = "128-109", volume = "14", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4263" }
Erdei, I.. (2010). Migrants of the Future – Serbian Youth between Imaginary and Real Migration. in Ethnologia Balcanica LIT Verlag., 14, 109-128. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4263
Erdei I. Migrants of the Future – Serbian Youth between Imaginary and Real Migration. in Ethnologia Balcanica. 2010;14:109-128. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4263 .
Erdei, Ildiko, "Migrants of the Future – Serbian Youth between Imaginary and Real Migration" in Ethnologia Balcanica, 14 (2010):109-128, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4263 .