Author (Person) | Morris, Jeremy |
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Series Title | European Urban and Regional Studies |
Series Details | Vol.23, No.3, July 2016, p481-496 |
Publication Date | July 2016 |
ISSN | 0969-7764 |
Content Type | Journal | Series | Blog |
Abstract: This article presents Russian and Ukrainian ethnographic case studies on informal payments in state health and education sectors. Overviews of post-socialist transformation can conflate daily informal payments to bureaucrats made by citizens with high-level political corruption. Micro-study analyses frame informal payments within a binary of ex-ante ‘insurance’ or ex-post ‘gratitude’, embedded within an economistic transactional frame. In contrast, this article takes a ‘social function’ approach, examining transactions for what they reveal about parties’ evaluations of personhood, both of the giver and receiver. Street-level bureaucrats and citizens engage in socially grounded negotiation whereby payment is assessed within a needs–means spectrum. The more needy, the smaller the payment; the greater the means, the greater the payment. This is an efficacy-affective form of redistribution and welfare functioning against a backdrop of the dysfunctional state’s refusal to act as social welfare guarantor. It reveals a degree of structuring from below of the qualitative intervention by the state in the lives of citizens, even as distrust and despair in post-socialist societies due to the retreat of the state from its duties towards citizens reach ever higher levels. |
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Source Link | Link to Main Source http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969776414522081 |
Subject Categories | Employment and Social Affairs |
Countries / Regions | Russia, Ukraine |