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Volumn 57, Issue 2, 1998, Pages 247-266

Privilege and prejudice: The occupations of Jews in Russia in 1989

(1)  Sacks, Michael Paul a  

a NONE

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EID: 0008708772     PISSN: 00376779     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.2307/2501850     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (7)

References (75)
  • 6
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    • Moscow
    • and Mikaella Kagan, "Evreiskaia emigratsiia iz byvshego SSSR v SShA: Obzor izmenenii za 70-90-e gody," Issledovaniia po proikladnoi i neotlozhnoi etnologii, no. 99 (Moscow, 1996);
    • (1996) Issledovaniia po Proikladnoi i Neotlozhnoi Etnologii , Issue.99
    • Kagan, M.1
  • 7
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    • The Reconstruction of Community and Jewish Identity in Russia
    • Zvi Gitelman, "The Reconstruction of Community and Jewish Identity in Russia," East European Jewish Affairs 24, no. 1 (1994): 35-56;
    • (1994) East European Jewish Affairs , vol.24 , Issue.1 , pp. 35-56
    • Gitelman, Z.1
  • 12
    • 54749138385 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Soviet Cultural and Ethnic Policies towards Jews: A Legacy Reassessed
    • Ro'i, ed.
    • Igor Krupnik, "Soviet Cultural and Ethnic Policies towards Jews: A Legacy Reassessed," in Ro'i, ed., Jews and Jewish Life in Russia, 72;
    • Jews and Jewish Life in Russia , pp. 72
    • Krupnik, I.1
  • 13
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    • Soviet Jews in the Glasnost Era
    • Semyon E. Reznik, "Soviet Jews in the Glasnost Era," Society 28, no. 4 (1991): 74-75.
    • (1991) Society , vol.28 , Issue.4 , pp. 74-75
    • Reznik, S.E.1
  • 23
    • 54749141106 scopus 로고
    • The Ethnic Dimension, Part II
    • Jerry G. Pankhurst and Michael Paul Sacks, eds., New York
    • see also Ralph Clem, "The Ethnic Dimension, Part II," in Jerry G. Pankhurst and Michael Paul Sacks, eds., Contemporary Soviet Society: Sociological Perspectives (New York, 1980), 32-62.
    • (1980) Contemporary Soviet Society: Sociological Perspectives , pp. 32-62
    • Clem, R.1
  • 25
    • 84972990718 scopus 로고
    • Jewish Emigration from the USSR: Some Observations
    • Igor Birman, "Jewish Emigration from the USSR: Some Observations," Soviet Jewish Affairs 9, no. 2 (1979): 52.
    • (1979) Soviet Jewish Affairs , vol.9 , Issue.2 , pp. 52
    • Birman, I.1
  • 29
    • 54749084964 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ryvkina, Evrei v postsovetskoi Rossii, 183. Ryvkina notes problems with these figures on the number emigrating, as not all those who were given permission actually emigrated, and those who emigrated illegally were not counted.
    • Evrei v Postsovetskoi Rossii , pp. 183
    • Ryvkina1
  • 35
    • 0003888646 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Benjamin Pinkus presents the range of terms that have been used to classify ethnic groups in official Soviet ideology. The categories for Jews have been at the bottom of the status hierarchy. Russians, of course, were among those at the top. Pinkus, Jews of the Soviet Union, 211-14.
    • Jews of the Soviet Union , pp. 211-214
    • Pinkus1
  • 42
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    • Jewish Marriages in the USSR: A Demographic Analysis
    • Mark Tolts, "Jewish Marriages in the USSR: A Demographic Analysis," Eastern European Jewish Affairs 22, no. 2 (1992): 3-19;
    • (1992) Eastern European Jewish Affairs , vol.22 , Issue.2 , pp. 3-19
    • Tolts, M.1
  • 43
    • 85121506191 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Trends in Soviet Jewish Demography since the Second World War
    • Ro'i, ed.
    • Mark Tolts, "Trends in Soviet Jewish Demography since the Second World War," in Ro'i, ed., Jews and Jewish Life in Russia, 365-82.
    • Jews and Jewish Life in Russia , pp. 365-382
    • Tolts, M.1
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    • 0000509890 scopus 로고
    • A Methodological Analysis of Segregation Indexes
    • The Index of Dissimilarity is calculated from the difference between the proportion of the Jewish employed population and the proportion of the Russian population (or any other two groups) in each occupational category. The index equals one-half the sum of these absolute differences times 100. Otis D. Duncan and Beverly Duncan, "A Methodological Analysis of Segregation Indexes," American Sociological Review 20 (1955): 210-17.
    • (1955) American Sociological Review , vol.20 , pp. 210-217
    • Duncan, O.D.1    Duncan, B.2
  • 52
    • 0022856896 scopus 로고
    • Racial Occupational Inequality, 1940-1980: National and Regional Trends
    • June
    • The Index of Dissimilarity's "primary weaknesses is that it is insensitive to the hierarchical aspects of occupational groups and thus measures nominal distribution rather than inequality." There is an alternative measure, the Index of Net Differences, but this requires having data on the ranking of occupations. Mark A. Fossett, Omer R. Galle, and William R. Kelly, "Racial Occupational Inequality, 1940-1980: National and Regional Trends," American Sociological Review 51 (June 1986): 423. The available data for Russia do not permit such a ranking.
    • (1986) American Sociological Review , vol.51 , pp. 423
    • Fossett, M.A.1    Galle, O.R.2    Kelly, W.R.3
  • 53
    • 0029171995 scopus 로고
    • Ethnic and Gender Divisions in the Work Force of Russia
    • January
    • See Michael Paul Sacks, "Ethnic and Gender Divisions in the Work Force of Russia," Post Soviet Geography 36 (January 1995): 5-7.
    • (1995) Post Soviet Geography , vol.36 , pp. 5-7
    • Sacks, M.P.1
  • 55
    • 54749097065 scopus 로고
    • Kiev
    • The number of Jews in the labor force of Ukraine was 258,589, just 50,237 fewer than in Russia. Jews in Ukraine formed just under 1 percent of the labor force, as compared with less than .5 percent for Russia. These and all other figures pertaining to Ukraine in this section are calculated from data in Ministerstvo statistiki Ukraini, Natsionalnii sklad naselennia Ukraini: Chastina 1 (Kiev, 1991), 136-49, 162-82.
    • (1991) Natsionalnii Sklad Naselennia Ukraini: Chastina 1 , pp. 136-149
  • 56
    • 54749109057 scopus 로고
    • Employment Patterns of Russian Minorities and Non-Russian Majorities in the Former Republics in 1989
    • paper, Warsaw, 6-11 August
    • The Index of Dissimilarity is influenced by the fact that there were one-third fewer occupational categories available for Ukraine than for Russia. Fewer categories mean that less segregation is likely to be revealed. There is evidence, however, that Russians in Ukraine had higher levels of socioeconomic achievement than Russians in Russia, and this may have contributed to less difference between Russians and Jews in Ukraine than in Russia. Michael Paul Sacks, "Employment Patterns of Russian Minorities and Non-Russian Majorities in the Former Republics in 1989" (paper, Fifth World Congress for Central and East European Studies, Warsaw, 6-11 August 1995).
    • (1995) Fifth World Congress for Central and East European Studies
    • Sacks, M.P.1
  • 57
    • 0346758455 scopus 로고
    • New York
    • For each of the 170 occupations, this calculation entailed multiplying the proportion Jewish in that occupation in Ukraine by the total number of people in that occupation in Russia. The resulting numbers were then used to produce a standardized distribution of Ukraine's Jews that was then compared with the actual distribution of Jews in Russia. For further discussion of this standardized measure, see Michael Paul Sacks, Work and Equality in Soviet Society: The Division of Labor by Age, Gender and Nationality (New York, 1982), 47-49.
    • (1982) Work and Equality in Soviet Society: The Division of Labor by Age, Gender and Nationality , pp. 47-49
    • Sacks, M.P.1
  • 58
    • 54749099537 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The concentration of Jews in a smaller number of categories, however, may in part have been an artifact of the occupational classification. Occupations where Jews were concentrated could have been less detailed than those where Russians were concentrated.
  • 61
    • 54749143922 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The way in which Jewish concentration in nonmanual occupations influences the measure of aggregate gender segregation is shown by applying a standardized Index of Dissimilarity in which each occupation has the same weight, rather than being weighted by the proportion of the group in the respective occupation. The resulting standardized measure for Russians was 53, within a few points of all other large ethnic groups in Russia except Jews. The standardized figure for Jews was 94. This seems to reflect the fact that among Jews, in contrast with other ethnic groups, many manual occupations comprised a very small proportion of the employed population and had especially few or even no Jewish females. Sacks, "Ethnic and Gender Divisions," 12.
    • Ethnic and Gender Divisions , pp. 12
    • Sacks1
  • 62
    • 54749143921 scopus 로고
    • Itogi vsesoiuznoi perepisi naseleniia 1989 goda
    • Minneapolis
    • The tolal Jewish labor force was 43 percent female as compared with 49 percent female among Russians (see table 4). But this difference is due to the smaller proportion of females in the Jewish population as compared to the Russian population and not to lower female age-specific labor force participation rates. For example, data for 1989 show that among Jews ranging in age from 30 to 54, at least 94 percent were employed (males and females combined; no separate figures available). Jewish employment rates were equal to or above Russian rates in all age groups over 30. Statisticheskii komitet sodruzhestva nezavisimykh gosudarstv, Itogi vsesoiuznoi perepisi naseleniia 1989 goda, Vol. 7, Natsional'nyi sostav naseleniia SSSR, part 6 (Minneapolis, 1993), 52, 84-86.
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    • Roots of Diversity and Conflict: Ethnic and Gender Differences in the Work Force of the Former Republics of Soviet Central Asia
    • Yaacov Ro'i, ed., London
    • It is interesting to note that gender differences also proved important in comparing ethnic groups of Muslim heritage and Russians in former Soviet Central Asia. Here too the men in the "minority" group had employment that overlapped with Russian women, but, in contrast with Jews, they were in lower status jobs and likely to be very much segregated from women of their own ethnicity. See Michael Paul Sacks, "Roots of Diversity and Conflict: Ethnic and Gender Differences in the Work Force of the Former Republics of Soviet Central Asia," in Yaacov Ro'i, ed., Muslim Eurasia: Conflicting Legacies (London, 1995), 269-88.
    • (1995) Muslim Eurasia: Conflicting Legacies , pp. 269-288
    • Sacks, M.P.1
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    • Understandings of Anti-Semitism in Russia: An Analysis of the Politics of Anti-Jewish Attitudes
    • Fall
    • James L. Gibson, "Understandings of Anti-Semitism in Russia: An Analysis of the Politics of Anti-Jewish Attitudes," Slavic Review 53, no. 3 (Fall 1994): 804;
    • (1994) Slavic Review , vol.53 , Issue.3 , pp. 804
    • Gibson, J.L.1
  • 66
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    • Social Distance from Jews in Russia and Ukraine
    • Fall
    • Vicki L. Hesli, Arthur H. Miller, William M. Reisinger, and Kevin L. Morgan, "Social Distance from Jews in Russia and Ukraine," Slavic Review 53, no. 3 (Fall 1994): 812.
    • (1994) Slavic Review , vol.53 , Issue.3 , pp. 812
    • Hesli, V.L.1    Miller, A.H.2    Reisinger, W.M.3    Morgan, K.L.4
  • 69
    • 54749137306 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • For example, the ratio of Jews per 10,000 Russians among heads of scientific organizations was 462, while the ratio among scientific personnel was 551; the ratio was 254 among heads of medical establishments and 363 among physicians.
  • 72
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    • Attitudes toward Jews and the Soviet Political Culture
    • James L. Gibson and Raymond M. Duch, "Attitudes toward Jews and the Soviet Political Culture," Journal of Soviet Nationalities 2, no. 1 (1991): 100.
    • (1991) Journal of Soviet Nationalities , vol.2 , Issue.1 , pp. 100
    • Gibson, J.L.1    Duch, R.M.2


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