Producing state capacity through corruption: the case of immigration control in Russia

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12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Immigration control in Russia, one of the world’s top five largest immigrant-receiving countries, is rife with corruption and other informal practices. Instead of framing corruption simply as bad governance, this article shows that informal strategies are intertwined with formal state practices to produce immigration control. Instead of presenting corruption as subversive of state institutions and contradictions between formal and informal practices as a signal of system dysfunction, I argue that state actors’ simultaneous formal and informal activities can work together towards a perhaps surprisingly coherent set of goals. Drawing on ethnographic work with migrants and legal-institutional analysis of Russia’s migration sphere, this article demonstrates how felt immigration control, or the experience of migrants, combines legal and informal strategies that center on coercion. It shows how coercive interactions between migrants and state agents produce visible data and media images that are projected to the public as immigration control.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)303-317
Number of pages15
JournalPost-Soviet Affairs
Volume37
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Funding

The author would like to thank the following colleagues for close readings of earlier drafts of this paper, thoughtful commentaries, and support: Barbara Junisbai, Venelin Ganev, Karol Czuba, Ed Schatz, participants of a 2019 PONARS workshop in St. Petersburg, and participants of the 2020 EACES-HSE workshop and 9th ICSID conference hosted by the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. Research funding was provided by a grant from Nazarbayev University’s Institute for Advanced Studies (IASANU). Many thanks to Daniiar Moldokanov for excellent research assistance and data collection in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. This work was supported by a grant from Nazarbayev University's Institute for Advanced Studies. The author would like to thank the following colleagues for close readings of earlier drafts of this paper, thoughtful commentaries, and support: Barbara Junisbai, Venelin Ganev, Karol Czuba, Ed Schatz, participants of a 2019 PONARS workshop in St. Petersburg, and participants of the 2020 EACES-HSE workshop and 9th ICSID conference hosted by the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. Research funding was provided by a grant from Nazarbayev University?s Institute for Advanced Studies (IASANU). Many thanks to Daniiar Moldokanov for excellent research assistance and data collection in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

Funders
IASANU
Nazarbayev University's Institute for Advanced Studies
Nazarbayev University?s Institute for Advanced Studies
Nazarbayev University’s Institute for Advanced Studies

    Keywords

    • corruption
    • deportation
    • Immigration control
    • immigration raids
    • state capacity
    • street-level enforcement

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Sociology and Political Science
    • Economics and Econometrics
    • Political Science and International Relations

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