Discordant Privilege: Russian Migrants in Kyrgyzstan


Abstract


Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 triggered an unprecedented wave of emigration, reshaping mobility patterns across Eurasia. The relocation of hundreds of thousands of Russian citizens has generated an important body of empirical work on post-2022 emigration. This article examines the case of Russian migration to Kyrgyzstan through the analysis of 17 in-depth interviews conducted remotely with Russian citizens residing in Bishkek. Bringing together Bourdieusian approaches to migrant capital and the aspirations–capabilities framework with postcolonial and lifestyle migration scholarship, we develop the concept of discordant privilege to capture the coexistence of structural advantage and lived precarity in migrants’ experiences.
We show how simplified entry and legalization pathways, the widespread use of the Russian language in Bishkek, and Kyrgyzstan’s comparatively low cost of living facilitated settlement, while limited financial resources, uneven capital convertibility, and employment disruptions generated economic strain, shaping migrants’ capabilities and aspirations for further mobility. Finally, migrants’ “gaze” on Kyrgyzstan as peripheral illuminates the persistence of postcolonial
hierarchies and the asymmetric stratification of mobility within the post-Soviet space.

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