Brubaker W R
Int Migr Rev. 1992 Summer;26(2):269-91.
"The breakup of the Soviet Union has transformed yesterday's internal migrants, secure in their Soviet citizenship, into today's international migrants of contested legitimacy and uncertain membership. This transformation has touched Russians in particular, of whom some 25 million live in non-Russian successor states. This article examines the politics of citizenship vis-a-vis Russian immigrants in the successor states, focusing on the Baltic states, where citizenship has been a matter of sustained and heated controversy." The author concludes that "formal citizenship cannot be divorced from broader questions of substantive belonging. Successor states' willingness to accept Russian immigrants as citizens, and immigrants' readiness to adopt a new state as their state, will depend on the terms of membership for national minorities and the organization of public life in the successor states." Data are from a variety of published sources.
苏联解体将昔日享有苏联公民身份、安稳无忧的国内移民变成了如今合法性存疑、成员身份不定的国际移民。这一转变对俄罗斯人影响尤甚,约有2500万俄罗斯人生活在非俄罗斯的苏联继承国。本文探讨了苏联继承国针对俄罗斯移民的公民身份政策,重点研究了波罗的海国家,在这些国家,公民身份问题一直是持续且激烈争论的焦点。作者得出结论:“形式上的公民身份无法脱离更广泛的实质性归属问题。继承国接纳俄罗斯移民成为公民的意愿,以及移民将新国家视为自己国家的意愿,将取决于少数民族的成员身份条件以及继承国公共生活的组织方式。”数据来源于各种已发表的资料。