Introduction
Migrant residential concentration areas have been a significant focus for scholars, with special attention given to these areas’ effects. The scope of literature on the effects—negative, concerning language skills (Lazear Reference Lazear1999) and education (Danzer et al. Reference Danzer, Feuerbaum, Piopiunik and Woessmann2018) and positive, concerning employment (Portes and Manning Reference Portes, Manning and Grusky2001) and psychological well-being (Jurcik et al. Reference Jurcik, Ahmed, Yakobov, Solopieieva‐Jurcikova and Ryder2013)—of migrant residential concentration areas is much more impressive than on their origination. The latter topic has so far received much less scholarly attention. There is some research on the underlying factors of the emergence of migrant residential concentration areas including social networks (MacDonald and MacDonald Reference MacDonald and MacDonald1964), white avoidance (Pais, South, and Crowder Reference Pais, South and Crowder2009), housing systems and welfare regimes (Andersson et al. Reference Andersson, Dhalmann, Holmqvist, Kauppinen, Turner, Andersen, Søholt, Vaattovaara, Vilkama, Wessell and Yousfi2010), etc. However, these factors are rarely fused into a comprehensive explanation with a detailed description of the specific mechanisms in operation.
Even though migration processes in the postsocialist context have been gaining more academic attention recently (Agadjanian, Menjívar, and Zotova Reference Agadjanian, Menjívar and Zotova2017; Górny and Kaczmarczyk Reference Górny, Kaczmarczyk, Inglis, Li and Khadria2020), migrant residential concentration in this context is poorly studied. On one hand, there are articles arguing that there are no migrant residential concentration areas in the postsocialist cities due to the sociospatial organization of the latter inherited from the Soviet period (Demintseva Reference Demintseva2017). On the other hand, there is empirical evidence that such areas arise in Central and Eastern Europe around large bazaars (Piekut Reference Piekut, Grubbauer and Kusiak2012). Unfortunately, the latter studies do not pay much attention to the origination of these areas and thus create the impression that migrant residential concentration areas arise around large bazaars by default.
Based on a multicase study (N = 37) conducted during 2018–2020 in Russia’s 15 largest cities, we argue that the emergence of migrant residential concentration areas around large bazaars in postsocialist cities only occurs in the presence of a certain set of factors. These factors fall into our proposed multifactor model and are as follows: (1) the number of migrants in a city is large; (2) the bazaar is large, preferably wholesale; (3) the bazaar has been operating in the same place for a long time; (4) there is a residential area within walking distance of the bazaar; (5) the property prices in this residential area are low; (6) the residential area is small to medium in size and detached from other residential areas; (7) the residential area includes a large share of dormitories and cheap newly constructed apartment blocks. Even though there are some studies illustrating migrant concentration in residential areas adjacent to bazaars in some European postsocialist cities (see, for example, Fiedlerová and Sýkora Reference Fiedlerová and Sýkora2015; Großmann et al. Reference Großmann, Arndt, Haase, Rink and Steinführer2015; Drbohlav and Čermáková Reference Drbohlav and Čermáková2016), this article is the first attempt to propose a set of factors underlying such areas’ formation in postsocialist cities. Although Russian cases are used in the study to describe the postsocialist cases in general, they do not present the patterns that are typical for all postsocialist cities. The model is dependent on specific variables, such as migration and housing history, as well as policies applied by the state. Thus, changes in those variables from case to case may influence the emergence and characteristics of migrant concentration areas, and we reflect on this in the next parts of the paper.
In what follows, we present the study results prefaced with a literature review, context characteristics, and research design description. The study results include the description of the “ideal type” of a migrant residential concentration area in a postsocialist city (as a peripheral, low-income neighborhood consisting mainly of Soviet-period high-rise buildings that is adjacent to a bazaar), a theoretical model describing the emergence of such an area, analysis of specific factors comprising this model, one by one, and a detailed description of one of the cases that comes closest to the ideal type. We conclude with a discussion of the main findings.
Literature Review
Migrant residential concentration has been in the focus of two main directions of research. First, scholars attempt to obtain an overview of migrants’ residential distribution and estimate the level of segregation, spotting areas of migrant concentration, usually based on statistical data for a specific territory, such as a city (Murdie and Borgegård Reference Murdie and Borgegård1998; Pamuk Reference Pamuk2004) or a whole country (Johnston, Poulsen, and Forrest Reference Johnston, Poulsen and Forrest2007; Hall Reference Hall2013). The resultant level of segregation, however, at least to some extent depends on the level of (dis)aggregation of ethnic categories (Poulsen, Johnston, and Forrest Reference Poulsen, Johnston and Forrest2004; Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Leung, Perez and Dragićević2020). Within this strand of research, scholars also look at the way migrant residential distribution changes over time: an analysis for three Canadian cities during the 1970s–2000s shows that during this period the main migrant reception areas in Toronto and Vancouver shifted from the city center to the suburban areas, whereas in Montreal they remained in the city center (Murdie Reference Murdie2008). Tracking over time where migrants reside allows researchers to “see” new types of settlements, such as ethnoburbs (Li Reference Li1998). However, the research in this direction is quite frequently reliant on official statistics. This can become a problem in the cases where the statistics are tampered with by the state policies or insufficient on some level, like excluding some groups of migrants due to the features of data collection.
Second, there are studies “zooming in” on the areas with high migrant concentration (O’Connor Reference O’Connor1994; Pasco and White Reference Pasco and Rebecca2020) and paying special attention to the social processes taking place that can be considered characteristic of these areas (Teixeira Reference Teixeira, Kaplan and Li2006; Kaplan and Recoquillon Reference Kaplan and Recoquillon2014). An important topic within this strand of research is whether migrant concentration is positive or negative for integration, and so far scholars have come up with contradictory findings (Waldinger Reference Waldinger1993; Xie and Gough Reference Xie and Gough2011). On one hand, living in an ethnic neighborhood can help a migrant obtain a safety net and employment as well as foster a sense of belonging to the new area (Mazumdar, Docuyanan, and McLaughlin Reference Mazumdar, Mazumdar, Docuyanan and McLaughlin2000) and contribute to lower depression levels (Jurcik et al. Reference Jurcik, Ahmed, Yakobov, Solopieieva‐Jurcikova and Ryder2013). Moreover, a workplace found in this manner can guarantee a higher payment than the one found in a mainstream labor market (Portes and Manning Reference Portes, Manning and Grusky2001; Edin, Fredriksson, and Åslund Reference Edin, Fredriksson and Åslund2003). On the other hand, residing among coethnics is tied to a lower level of competency in the learning the country’s language (Lazear Reference Lazear1999; Chiswick and Miller Reference Chiswick and Miller2005), poorer education outcomes among the children (Grönqvist Reference Grönqvist2006; Danzer et al. Reference Danzer, Feuerbaum, Piopiunik and Woessmann2018), higher discrimination (Douzet and Robine Reference Douzet and Robine2015), and even religious radicalization (Hüttermann Reference Hüttermann2018). There is evidence that the effects of concentration on integration are linked with the characteristics of migrants (Murdie and Ghosh Reference Murdie and Ghosh2010).
However, neither scholars zooming in on specific areas of migrant concentration nor those who “zoom out” for a higher-level analysis pay much attention to the explanation of such areas’ origination. That is, there is some research explaining migrant or ethnic concentration in an urban context with different factors, including migrants’ social networks (MacDonald and MacDonald Reference MacDonald and MacDonald1964) and preference to live with coethnics (Moghaddam Reference Moghaddam and Frisken1994; Clark and Fossett Reference Clark and Fossett2008; Mazza and Punzo Reference Mazza and Punzo2016), tendency of ethnic majority to avoid “others” (Pais, South, and Crowder Reference Pais, South and Crowder2009; Andersen Reference Andersen2017), discrimination (Hulchanski Reference Hulchanski1993; Farley Reference Farley1995), housing and welfare regimes (Arbaci Reference Arbaci2007; Andersson et al. Reference Andersson, Dhalmann, Holmqvist, Kauppinen, Turner, Andersen, Søholt, Vaattovaara, Vilkama, Wessell and Yousfi2010), socioeconomic status (Kaplan and Woodhouse Reference Kaplan and Woodhouse2004), or some combinations of these (Owusu Reference Owusu1999; Musterd Reference Musterd2005). Nevertheless, these factors are rarely fused into a comprehensive explanation with detailed description of the mechanisms in operation (But see Massey [Reference Massey1985] and Li [Reference Li1998] for exclusions). The research this article presents works on both planes: we zoom in on the areas to establish the features they possess as well as the reasons they might be considered optimal for migrants who are in the process of making their residential choice, and we zoom out—looking into the pattern that these features present on a larger scale of a postsocialist city.
Although migration processes in the postsocialist context have recently gained more academic attention (Agadjanian, Menjívar, and Zotova Reference Agadjanian, Menjívar and Zotova2017; Górny and Kaczmarczyk Reference Górny, Kaczmarczyk, Inglis, Li and Khadria2020), migrant residential concentration in this context is poorly studied. Some quantitative research (Vendina Reference Vendina2004; Vendina, Panin, and Tikunov Reference Vendina, Panin and Tikunov2019) into the available data for Moscow proposes that although there is a tendency for migrants to settle in peripheral areas of the city, the difference in the share of migrant population is rather minute to proclaim the existence of migrant residential concentration areas. Some articles looking into other cases—for example, in Czech metropolitan areas (Přidalová and Hasman Reference Přidalová and Hasman2018)—witness migrant residential concentration areas, whereas others argue that they do not form due to the sociospatial organization of the cities inherited from the Soviet period (Demintseva Reference Demintseva2017). However, there is evidence that the often-declared absence of spatial segregation in socialist cities was more a reflection of a taboo on the discussion of the topic in literature than of a real situation (Ladányi Reference Ladányi1993; Ruoppila and Kährik Reference Ruoppila and Kährik2003; Bazhenova Reference Bazhenova2010; Makarova Reference Makarova2013), not to mention the rapid changes that many postsocialist cities have undergone for the last 30 years (Li and Wu Reference Li and Wu2008) even though these changes are different from the processes taking place in the Western cities (Großmann et al. Reference Großmann, Arndt, Haase, Rink and Steinführer2015). Moreover, for the postsocialist cities the research into the topic of poverty concentration is more relevant as opposed to ethnic one in terms of these transformations of the last three decades (Liu and Wu Reference Liu and Wu2006; Nord, Luloff, and Jensen Reference Nord, Luloff and Jensen1995), whereas migrant concentration is mentioned briefly or as one of the consequences of economic segregation.
One of the features of postsocialist cities is the existence of large bazaars (Schlögel Reference Schlögel, Grubbauer and Kusiak2012; Huwelmeier Reference Huwelmeier2013), which, usually located in lower-income areas on the outskirts of a city, are very diverse: they can take the place of a former stadiums or warehouses and factory buildings (Rawitsch Reference Rawitsch2020) and can be surrounded with residential areas or detached from them. As a rule, a considerable part of business owners and employees in such bazaars are international migrants (Yessenova Reference Yessenova, Dannhaeuser and Werner2006; Humphrey and Skvirskaja Reference Humphrey and Skvirskaja2009) for two reasons: this economic niche is not as attractive for nonmigrants because of low margins, but at the same time it is easy for migrants to enter this sector (Hiebert, Rath, and Vertovec Reference Hiebert, Rath and Vertovec2015). If a bazaar is surrounded with residential areas, there is evidence that they become areas with high migrant concentration (Fiedlerová and Sýkora Reference Fiedlerová and Sýkora2015; Patzer, Góralska, and Winkowska Reference Patzer, Góralska and Winkowska2015; Erokhina, Reference Erokhina2017; Rawitsch Reference Rawitsch2020). Although the literature gives the impression that this is an inevitable process, meaning that proximity to a large bazaar is the only sufficient factor for the emergence of a migrant residential concentration area, our study shows that it happens only under a set of specific circumstances. Before discussing these factors, we shortly describe the context and research design.
Context Description
The most important contextual aspect is the urban history of Russian cities, especially the post–World War II period and the post-Soviet change. To understand why migrant residential concentration areas appear where they do, we need to look back on the history of these areas and evolution of their attractiveness to various groups of general population, as in many cases the important factors of residential patterns arise from those processes (Tammaru et al. Reference Tammaru, van Ham, Marcińczak, Musterd, Tammaru and van Ham2015). Undeniably, in many cases worldwide there is a link between the poorer areas and migrant concentration (Massey Reference Massey1985, Costa and de Valk Reference Costa and de Valk2018, Chiswick and Miller Reference Chiswick and Miller2005), so it is important to establish where such areas tend to form. Thus, this section follows the specifics of the two aforementioned periods while answering the question of how the cities’ structure came to be the way that it is now. By juxtaposing migration history to this context, we strive to create a current understanding of what the migrants’ place is in residential patterns in Russian cities.
The urbanization and industrialization at the turn of the 20th century laid the grounds for the industrial development of the Soviet era. With World War II, many factories were transferred to the new locations farther inland (first, in the Urals and Siberia), which served as an impetus for these towns’ and cities’ growth (Usanova Reference Usanova2014). However, it was not until the 1960s that large-scale residential house building directed at providing each family with an apartment started (Meerovich Reference Meerovich, Kuzmin, Akimov, Rogunova, Terekhova, Karpukhina and Korobova2016). The late Soviet period was characterized with remarkably low levels of segregation, which, according to different academic interpretations, could be a result of a deliberate policy of social mixing or the tendency of house building and distribution of residential units to be organized by different-level enterprises and government bodies. As opposed to European practices, Soviet housing, especially in larger cities, was closely linked to state and various institutions in a form of “employer-provided housing” (Meerovich Reference Meerovich, Kuzmin, Akimov, Rogunova, Terekhova, Karpukhina and Korobova2016). This policy prompted social mixing, as one area could house employees of drastically different institutions and, thus, backgrounds.
After the dissolution of the USSR and introduction of a market economy, the residential development in the Russian cities changed and has by now taken the form of either infill construction (tochechnaya zastroika) in the areas deemed most attractive to potential residents, mostly city center (Peshina and Ryzhenkov Reference Peshina and Ryzhenkov2013), or construction of new residential complexes (Pozdniakova Reference Pozdniakova2011). These complexes can take on diametrically opposed statuses. In the case of central high-end areas, they constitute the most expensive residential development, grouped together with the older buildings in the city center—the richer areas of the cities. Alternatively, the complexes that fall under the so-called economy-class type may imply the use of cheaper construction materials, less developed infrastructure, and location far away from the city center, in which case they are put in the same category as old, dilapidated housing of the previous epochs—and make up cheaper housing options and, thus, areas of poorer population concentration. These new modes of residential development arise against the background of older urban structures, and recent studies have witnessed processes of social polarization in this context (Vendina, Panin, and Tikunov Reference Vendina, Panin and Tikunov2019).
As in many other countries, the cities in Russia have the concentration of economic opportunities and thus attract international migrants more so than do the rural areas (Russian Federal State Statistic Service 2020). International migration started in Russia after the USSR collapse, but unlike many other post-Soviet republics, Russia became a country of not only emigration but also immigration, and it is by now the main migrant destination country (Denisenko and Chudinovskikh Reference Denisenko and Chudinovskikh2012) within the post-Soviet migration system.Footnote 1 In the 1990s, Russia experienced the influx of mostly Russian speakers, also called “compatriots” (Vishnevskii Reference Vishnevskii2013, 100), as well as ethnicFootnote 2 migrants from the South Caucasus. The 2000s saw the start of a labor migration boom, with immigrants arriving from Ukraine, Moldova, and Central Asian states. Today, the most prominent migration flows to Russia are heading from Central Asia: in 2019, the citizens of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan constituted almost 40% of the 10.7 million foreign citizens who were present in Russia at a single pointFootnote 3 and about two-thirds of the 5.4 million of those who came to work.Footnote 4 The events of 2020–2022 were certainly expected to change the migration trends in Russia. Nevertheless, according to the official migration statistics (and in the absence of other data), the immigration flows from Central Asia persist at a relatively unchanged rate, with most of the migrants from Central Asian states still coming to Russia for work (Ministry of the Internal Affairs, Migration Office 2023).
A prominent sphere of the employment of migrants in Russia is trade: according to different estimations, the share of all migrants employed in trade varies from 9% (Florinskaya et al. Reference Florinskaya, Mkrtchyan, Maleva and Kirillova2015) to about a third (Mukomel Reference Mukomel2016). There is evidence that bazaars are among the trade niches that are popular with migrants (Agadjanian and Zotova Reference Agadjanian and Zotova2012), and this holds true even despite the regulations introduced in 2007 that limited the opportunities of foreign citizens for employment in retail trade (Mikhailova and Tyuryukanova Reference Mikhailova, Tyuryukanova, Vitkovskaya, Platonova and Shkolnikov2009). These measures were part of a state initiative intended to “civilize” the retail trade, which has led to the displacement of hard-to-control open-air markets in favor of shopping malls and supermarkets (Dyatlov Reference Dyatlov2014)—the share of the former in the Russian retail trade has decreased over the last 20 years,Footnote 5 as many open-air markets were transformed into permanent structures (shopping malls or shopping centers) or underwent other changes. Despite these transformations, the vernacular name stuck, and most of those places are still seen and known as bazaars—and part of them stayed, to a large extent, “migrant” spaces. Additionally, it is important to note that these transformations affected mostly retail trade bazaars, whereas most wholesale bazaars were left to be. Presently, every large Russian city has several bazaars, varying in size and type: they can be wholesale, retail, or a combination of both and sell a variety of goods—food, clothing, etc.
Research Design
The purpose of the research was to determine under what conditions migrant residential concentration areas around bazaars do and do not emerge, using the comparison of the cases to explain their origination. That is, we left the consideration of the consequences of segregation processes (e.g., poverty rates and integration perspectives) to further research on the topic, instead focusing on the factors that may contribute to the emergence of segregation in general and spatial and socioeconomic segregation in particular.
In accordance with this purpose, we undertook a multicase study.Footnote 6 This research method, although relatively underused so far, has advantages that are similar to those of a single-case study, including paying special attention to the contextual factors and reliance on multiple sources of data (Yin Reference Yin2018, 45–46). However, unlike a single-case study, this method builds on the comparison and contrast of several cases under scrutiny and thus allows for richer analysis opportunities (Stake Reference Stake2013; Yin Reference Yin2018). For our research, we targeted studying bazaars and adjacent residential areas in all Russian cities with over a million residents (N = 15). The focus was on finding out in which contexts migrant residential concentration areas emerge, delineating factors underlying their formation, and providing an explanation for why they emerged or not. According to our research, a “case” is thus defined as a bazaar with an adjacent residential area.
The research consisted of four stages: the preparatory stage, the pilot fieldwork stage, the main fieldwork stage, and the analysis stage. In general, a variety of methods has been used including the analysis of the residential statistics, academic and nonacademic literature and media on the topic, expert in-depth and express interviews, observation, and digital ethnography. The way these methods were applied is described in the following paragraphs.
During the preparatory stage of work, a desk-research phase and a series of expert interviews (N = 108) in all cities in Russia with an official population count of at least 1 million were organized to select cases and get acquainted with the research contexts. Those include Cheljabinsk, Kazan, Krasnojarsk, Moscow, Nizhnij Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Omsk, Perm, Rostov-on-Don, Samara, St. Petersburg, Ufa, Volgograd, Voronezh, and Yekaterinburg. The desk research mainly entailed analysis of academic and nonacademic publications as well as statistics and social media. The set of experts in each city could vary, but the basis for the sampling was an agreed-upon protocol set, which consisted of a scholar specializing in urban history, a migration researcher, and a head of a migrant-oriented nongovernmental organization (NGO); however, in most cases the number of experts exceeded those three. There are limitations to expert interviews, which were considered while analyzing their results: specifically, the bias that any interview entails. To ensure objectivity, the data from the interviews were compared with the data from the research literature and official state sources. The combination of this information allowed us to select 37 cases—main bazaars in all the cities—as well as to get acquainted with the urban history and migration situation within each city. As a rule, we selected a minimum of two bazaars for each city: one selling food and the other selling consumer goods, wholesale, retail, or both. Selected cases were then further studied by the research team of the authors of this article, using interview and observation as the main methods. Data collection was performed in accordance with the case study protocol developed and tested during the pilot stage.
The pilot fieldwork stage was directed at the preliminary testing of the developed methodology of field research. It consisted of the three out of four researchers from the research team studying bazaar-adjacent areas in Moscow and the Moscow region, where researchers #1 and #2 studied cases in one city and researchers #2 and #3 in another. In total, seven cases were collected and later included in the body of the present research. Upon the analysis of the pilot stage, the initial case study protocol was edited based on the field research experience. Along with the protocol, a casebook was developed to normalize the process of data collection. The concept of a casebook is similar to that of “table shells” described in Yin (Reference Yin2018, 143): it helps researchers working on various cases stay “on the same page” and be sure to focus on the same main topics.
During the main fieldwork stage, another 30 cases were studied by the researchers individually in accordance with the developed case study protocol. Within an individual case study, the task was to describe the bazaar and the adjacent residential area, decide whether it can be classified as a migrant residential concentration area or not, and then provide an explanation of why a migrant residential concentration area was or was not formed there.
In discussing the process of data collection, it is important to consider the baselines that were used for the cases. Arguably, the most straightforward way to classify residential areas would be to analyze statistics for the corresponding units. However, in the Russian context there is a problem that arises from the unreliability of statistical data, especially on the level of smaller areas. This makes the process of properly defining the geographical distribution of migrants contingent on quantitative research; however, in the case of this study we focus mostly on the qualitative aspect. Russian census data contain some categories that are useful for identifying migrants such as citizenship, country of birth, and ethnic category. However, there are several important hindrances that did not allow us to rely solely on the census data for these purposes. First, the smallest census unit for cities of a million residents or more is too large: as a rule, it is an administrative area (administrativny rayon) with a population varying from several thousand people to more than 200,000 people, and such a scale did not allow us to single out the smaller units we needed, like districts and neighborhoods. Second, there are serious deficiencies in the most recent Russian census of 2010 related to the overall collection of data and data of migrants, specifically (Andreev Reference Andreev2012; Beloborodov Reference Beloborodov2014). Finally, the latest census was conducted in 2010 and thus is quite outdated, and the new one planned for 2020 was postponed to 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As an alternative to the census, we considered statistics of the Ministry of Internal Affairs based on the addresses of registration of foreign citizens. Unfortunately, though, registration addresses are rarely identical to the real residences of migrants, making it unsuitable for the specifics of the research in discussion. Due to this overall situation, we could not rely solely on the statistical data and had to undertake field research.
Within each case’s fieldwork (during both pilot and main stages), the following combination of observation and interviews was used. To start, we conducted driving interviews around different parts of the researched cities (For more about this method, see Kusenbach [Reference Kusenbach2003] and Brown and Durrheim [Reference Brown and Durrheim2009]) with city experts such as researchers, real estate agents, or tour guides. This, along with further contextualization of the data through supplementary literature analysis, helped us gain understanding and extrapolate preliminary knowledge on the variance of the socioeconomic and spatial characteristics of the cities as well as the geographical distribution of migrants.
Next, observation and interviews with informants at the bazaars helped to pinpoint various groups of people working there and get preliminary cues of the residential distribution of migrants employed there. This information, together with data from the previous research steps and an analysis of maps, laid the grounds for the selection of residential area or areas nearest to the bazaar. Using the combination of methods, we identified their boundaries, classified buildings, and sampled buildings and their entrances (podjezd) where we conducted observation and interviews with their inhabitants—migrants and nonmigrants. These interviews varied in length from several minutes to an hour and a half, but the majority lasted less than 30 minutes. The essential minimum of these interviews included questions on the number of migrantsFootnote 7 in the building and in the apartments next door to an informant. If possible, the interviews also included other topics such as the personal characteristics of the informant including their migration history, if any, and living conditions; history of the building and characteristics of the dwellers; characteristics of the area in general including schools, comparison with other areas in the city, and future residential plans.
These interviews were conducted up to the point when we received a consistent image about the share of migrants in a building and each subsequent interview and observation confirmed this image. From an analytical standpoint, starting from buildings and expanding to the overall area and complementing this data with evidence from interviews with local experts such as school principals and local shop assistants (the total number of all interviews within the case studies was 877), we were able to classify an area as a migrant residential concentration area or not. This method of research has its limitations, and because we could not use precise statistical figures, we could neither get an accurate numerical value for the share of migrants in the area nor set an a priori cutoff point for the share of migrants to identify migrant residential concentration areas in the study. The research did, however, provide us with the understanding of whether the areas in question were (a) (almost) absolutely nonmigrant, (b) mostly nonmigrant, (c) nonmigrant with a considerable percentage of migrants, (d) mostly migrant. Although they are not the most accurate division of the areas, these categories allowed us to set the framework for our areas of interest. Based on the categories above, we used the following criteria to define migrant residential concentration areas: (1) the share of migrants residing in this area is considerable (over 20%), (2) it is higher than that in other comparable areas of the city, and (3) the area has a high number of residents relative to the city. The share of over 20% of migrant population correlates with most ideal types of migrant residential concentration areas used in international contexts (For an elaborate description of those, see Seol [Reference Seol, Wong and Rigg2010]). This framework allowed us to estimate the boundaries of residential areas for the research as well as to pinpoint the discrepancies between Russian ideal type and other international cases.
The fieldwork conducted in each case, together with the preliminary desk study and expert interviews, provided a basis for the within-case analysis presented further in interim summaries created for each case. These summaries included case descriptions, reasons for classifying residential area(s)Footnote 8 within the case as a migrant residential concentration area, and theoretical suggestions of why in this specific case a migrant residential concentration area was or wasn’t formed. After getting acquainted with these interim summaries, we gathered for the cross-case analysis. During several analytical sessions, we undertook several actions. First, we constructed an ideal type of a migrant residential concentration area and differentiated our cases according to their relation to this ideal type (all cases are listed in Appendix). Second, we came up with the factors that are essential for forming a migrant residential concentration area and constructed a theoretical explanation of how such areas come into being in the context of postsocialist cities. When developing this explanation, we oriented ourselves toward the analytical sociology tradition with its focus on mechanisms (Hedström and Bearman Reference Hedström and Bearman2009).
Such methodology has some limitations as mentioned above. To summarize, (1) in some cases, the bazaar-adjacent residential area had clear-cut boundaries, but in others the boundaries were vague (e.g., a residential area seamlessly merged into the rest of the city), which prompted a researcher to make a deliberate decision of what to include in a case, and setting boundaries in different ways could influence the resultant share of migrants in a case under study; (2) because we could not ground our classification of cases in reliable and suitable statistical data, our analysis is quite rough and approximate. However, we believe that the multicase study method, with its constant comparing across a large number of cases, provided us with the opportunity to meaningfully address the research question.
Results
Among all 37 cases, there are six cases that are closest to the ideal type of migrant residential concentration area—prime examples (cases in group 1, Appendix). This means that they meet all three criteria for a migrant residential concentration area described above and rank highest in terms of the very rough estimations of the share of migrants residing there, with approximately at least 20% of apartments occupied by migrants.
There are also cases that stray farther from the ideal type. First, these are cases that fit all three criteria of a migrant residential concentration area but where the estimated share of residential units taken by migrants is lower than that in the prime examples (cases in group 2, Appendix). Second, there are cases where the share of migrants’ residential units is higher than 20% but they are concentrated in a small residential area or an area with a small number of dwellers (cases in group 3, Appendix)—for example, an area with only one residential building near a bazaar that is a dormitory with predominantly migrant dwellers (case #13) or a bazaar that is surrounded with one-, two-, and three-story detached houses more than half of which house migrants, grouped on several small streets (case #17). Both cases are very small when considered in the context of a city with a population of over a million people that consists mostly of high-rise buildings.
Finally, there are cases where the share of migrants is much smaller than in all previously mentioned examples, even though it can be higher than in other parts of a corresponding city (cases in group 4, Appendix)—these cases were considered as those where migrant residential concentration areas were not formed.
Comparing and contrasting all the cases shaped our understanding of what a migrant residential concentration area is, its formation, and the factors underlying this process.
What Is a Migrant Residential Concentration Area: A Description of an Ideal Type
We shall now describe an ideal type of a migrant residential concentration area, which we have constructed based on the analysis of all our cases, starting with those considered prime examples. In its essence, a prime example of a migrant residential concentration area in Russian cities is a residential area consisting of mostly high-rise buildings that is adjacent to a large bazaar; located on the outskirts of a city; and surrounded with other enterprises employing migrants such as cafes, small shops, car services, etc. Another important attribute of such an area is the share of residential units (apartments, rooms in dormitories, etc.) rented or owned by migrants being higher than 20%. There is a tendency for migrants to live with more people than do nonmigrants (Varshaver, Ivanova, and Rocheva Reference Varshaver2020), so the actual migrant population in an area could exceed 20%. In some cases, buildings located near or within the bazaar premises may have over 50% migrant residents, but as you move away from the epicenter, the proportion of migrants decreases. Therefore, the overall share of migrant residential units in the area is rarely above 50%.
Concerning nonmigrant dwellers of the area, they can be organized into several groups. In Soviet-era housing areas, there are individuals who were granted state-provided housing back then. Presently, most of them are retired or hold low-skilled positions or, in some cases, work at a local factory. Additionally, there are the adult children of these individuals who inherited apartments and chose to reside there. Last, regardless of the area’s construction period, there are people drawn to the area due to its affordable property prices. These individuals are typically young families and internal migrants from either villages or towns within the same region or other regions.
Another feature of the migrant residential concentration area is that children with a migrant background constitute more than a half of the students in the local school, thus labeling it a “migrant school,” which in public opinion is more often than not equal to a “bad” school. If there are several schools in the area, the share of migrants in them can vary but remains relatively high.
Therefore, the features of the ideal type can be organized in a list by their relation to various factors as follows:
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• Housing stock, consisting of high-rise buildings of the Soviet period or modern economy-class housing complexes
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• Distant location (outskirts, geographically separated from the central part of the city by other areas), adjacency to a bazaar and other infrastructure tied to migrant employment, high share of migrant children in schools
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• High proportion of migrant-occupied property, especially in the epicenter—the area closest to the bazaar
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• Lower-income nonmigrant population as well as inherited property (in the case of Soviet-era housing)
Although these features relate to those of the ideal types of low-skilled migrant or poverty concentration areas in Asian cities (for examples see Van Grunsven Reference Van Grunsven, Wong and Rigg2010; Seol Reference Seol, Wong and Rigg2010; Liu and Wu Reference Liu and Wu2006), there are several differences—for instance, complete residential isolation of such areas in Singapore’s case (Van Grunsven Reference Van Grunsven, Wong and Rigg2010) as opposed to a more-gradual drop in migrant residents’ share in relation to the distance to a bazaar in the Russian case or higher shares of rural migrants than international ones in Nanjing (Liu and Wu Reference Liu and Wu2006). The closest case seems to be one described in (Seol Reference Seol, Wong and Rigg2010) of ethnic enclaves and migrant residential concentration areas in Korean cities, with most of the aforementioned features being present.
How a Migrant Residential Concentration Area Emerges: Mechanisms of Formation
The typical story of the emergence of migrant residential concentration areas in Russian cities is as follows (Varshaver et al. Reference Varshaver, Rocheva, Ivanova and Andreeva2021). In the 1990s, the prolific street trade led to the development of wholesale or retail bazaars on the outskirts of the cities or as extensions of existing Soviet bazaars. These bazaars primarily focused on selling food and/or consumer goods and eventually took on significant logistical roles within the cities or neighboring regions. Initially, migrants from the South Caucasus were the first to work in these bazaars, but over time an increasing number of migrants from Central Asia entered the market. They were either involved in business activities or employed in sales and support positions. To minimize housing and commute expenses, they sought accommodation within walking distance of the bazaars, which created demand for housing in the residential areas adjacent to said bazaars.
Alongside this new demand arose the simultaneous trend for nonmigrant dwellers to leave the area. Although not directly caused by the bazaar, this departure was influenced by various factors characteristic of the area such as its remote location from the rest of the city and its relatively low standard of living and prestige. However, this trend resulted in an increased number of vacant properties, which became accessible for migrants to reside in. Additionally, the initiation of new residential construction projects, particularly those labeled as economy class, further contributed to the availability of unoccupied apartments, which migrants increasingly chose to move into, even more so than the older buildings.
With the increase of the share of migrants in areas near bazaars, two other processes occurred. As a result of the first, they gradually received the status of migrant neighborhoods among residents of the city and thus became unlikely residential options for some nonmigrants. The second has resulted in the areas gaining attraction as housing options for migrants who were employed outside the bazaar. Upon such migrants’ first arrival to the city, they were provided accommodation by their relatives or friends in these areas, and when deciding where to rent a dwelling of their own, they chose to stay in a familiar neighborhood, as there they could make use of migrant-targeted infrastructure (e.g., cafes or martial arts clubs) and social networks, especially ties with other residents with migrant backgrounds. The networks also served as the main means for new residents to learn about their prospective homes. A migrant school, which facilitated the enrollment of children with a migrant background, located within the neighborhood, acted as an additional “pull factor” for migrants with school-age or younger children.
It is important to note that the descriptions provided for an ideal type of a migrant residential concentration area and its emergence are based on the empirical cases, which can deviate from these descriptions in several aspects. One instance of such discrepancies is as follows: although we previously characterized the area as predominantly consisting of high-rise buildings, it should be noted that there were instances where detached houses were the primary residential structures. The bazaar described in the paragraphs above emerged in the 1990s, but in certain cases bazaars were established later. Among the cases, there were instances of a bazaar being relocated to its current position within the past 15 years, and it could have a more central location rather than being situated on the outskirts. Moreover, the patterns of the emergence of migrant residential concentration areas provided above can, in part, correlate with cases where the share of migrant residential units is less than 20%. Overall, a specific set of factors needed for the emergence of a migrant residential concentration area can be deduced from all the empirical cases. Those factors are discussed in the following section.
Factors for the Emergence of a Migrant Residential Concentration Area
Overall, our research of empirical cases identified seven factors that underlie the emergence of a migrant residential concentration area.
1 The Number of Migrants in the City
The first—and seemingly obvious—factor, yet still worth discussing, is the proportionate number of migrants relative to the total population of the city. A higher percentage increases the likelihood of the development of a migrant residential concentration area. Due to the lack of up-to-date city-level statistics specifically on the migrant population, we derived these percentages by using regional-level statistics on foreign citizens for all regions where our 37 cases were located; these regional statistics served as proxies for the researched cases.Footnote 9 Indeed, if we rank the cities according to these calculations, we can see that the most prominent migrant residential concentration areas emerge in the cities ranking highest: Moscow takes first place, Novosibirsk third place, Yekaterinburg fourth, and Samara fifth. There are two exceptions, St. Petersburg and Rostov-on-Don, but on different grounds. The former takes second place within this rating, but there are no outstanding migrant residential concentration areas in the city. On the contrary, the latter is in the lowest, fourth, quartile of the rating, but it hosts one of the six prime examples of migrant residential concentration areas.
2 Type and Size of the Bazaar
Bazaars may differ in terms of their migrant workforce composition. Wholesale food bazaars predominantly employ migrants, whereas bazaars selling construction materials primarily hire nonmigrants. Consumer-goods bazaars exhibit a less-clear mix of migrants and nonmigrants. The proportion of migrants in a specific type of bazaar also varies depending on the city. Additionally, the size and nature of a bazaar serve as crucial indicators for the quantity and types of jobs available to and/or taken up by migrants, consequently affecting the likelihood of a migrant residential concentration area forming around it. Wholesale bazaars, requiring a greater number of low-skilled workers such as loaders and carriage operators, tend to prompt the emergence of migrant residential concentration areas to a greater extent than do other types. Conversely, retail trade bazaars, even large ones, do not necessitate as many workers. Furthermore, it is common for migrants who are employed in retail-trade bazaars to have resided in Russia for some time, owning their own apartments and transportation. Consequently, they are less inclined to minimize expenses and reside near the bazaar; instead, they live in other parts of the city.
3 Duration of a Bazaar’s Operation in the Same Spot
There is a direct correlation between the duration of a bazaar’s existence in a particular location and the likelihood of a migrant residential concentration area forming around it. On the other hand, if a bazaar or certain parts of it have been previously relocated, the probability of a migrant residential concentration area emerging in its vicinity is lower. This is true for all our prime examples of migrant residential concentration areas where bazaars have existed since at least the 1990s and sometimes even since the Soviet time, with the only exception being the Moscow bazaar Sadovod (case #4), which emerged at its spot only in 2009. In some cases, moving a bazaar leads to the erosion of a migrant residential concentration area on the old place (case #36), whereas in others the migrant residential concentration area can remain in its previous position (case #1).
4 Property Prices in the Area in Comparison with the City Average
Lower property prices in the area neighboring the bazaar (relative to the city’s average price point) increases the likelihood of there being a migrant residential concentration area. Four cases among the “prime examples” illustrate this thesis, ranking among the cheapest areas in corresponding cities (cases #1–3 and #6; PwC and Avito Nedvizhimost’ 2018a, 2018b, 2018c), but two cases do not fully comply with this logic (cases #4 and #5). It seems that attractiveness of the area among migrants in some cases increases demand for housing there, which, in turn, counteracts a price decrease. However, the nature of this interaction is a question for a separate study.
5 Distance between a Bazaar and a Residential Area
In general, the spatial configuration of a bazaar and the closest residential area can be categorized into three situations: (1) partially overlapping, where some residential buildings are located within the bazaar’s territory, some on the boundary, and the remainder outside of it; (2) in proximity of each other, where the bazaar is situated within walking distance of the residential area; and (3) distanced, where transportation is required to reach the residential area that is nearest to the bazaar. The first and the second configurations are much more prone to having a migrant residential concentration area form in them, like in case #5 where residential and commercial parts are tangled or cases #3 and #6 where residential areas are adjacent to the bazaars. The third configuration, on the contrary, leads to a more-even distribution of bazaar-employed migrants throughout the city, because if one has to commute between home and bazaar, the accommodation options cover a larger area or even several neighborhoods. That might be the reason why case #11 is not among the prime examples: the residential area closest to the bazaar is quite large and to get there one needs transport; thus, although the majority of the bazaar’s workers tends to live in the area, for them it doesn’t matter which part of the area they choose. Moreover, some workers prefer to commute to other parts of the city. However, in this case, it is also the next factor that plays its role.
6 The Number of Residential Units and Residential Area’s Detachment from other Areas
A situation precluding the emergence of a migrant residential concentration area is illustrated by cases where the nearest residential area to the bazaar is extensive and lacks clear boundaries separating it from other parts of the city. In this case, migrants are also dispersed across one or even several neighboring areas. Conversely, if the number of residential units in that area is relatively small and the area is distinctively separated from other regions, it becomes the preferred choice for migrants employed at the bazaar. As a result, the probability of a migrant residential concentration area increases significantly. There is a whole range of cases when migrant residential concentration areas did not emerge because a bazaar is inscribed in a city’s homogeneous residential fabric, stretching across vast territories without clear boundaries (case #37). At the same time, this factor contributed to the formation of a prominent migrant residential concentration area in case #6, where the residential area is modest in size and insulated from others with train tracks and industrial areas.
7 Characteristics of the Housing Stock
The surrounding housing stock around a bazaar encompasses a range from detached houses to high-rise buildings. High-rise buildings differ based on the construction period, with Soviet-era buildings consisting of private flats, communal flats, or dormitories (such as kommunalki, podselenki, gostinki, malosemeiki, etc.). Each type affects the probability of a migrant residential concentration area arising in its own way. In the case of a bazaar surrounded by a cluster of detached houses, the streets nearest to the bazaar often have a predominantly migrant population. However, just a few streets away from the bazaar, the situation can be entirely different, with little to no migrants among residents. In these more distant streets, land parcels are often enclosed by high fences and residents use cars, which mitigates any perceived inconvenience from the bazaar. As a result, nonmigrant dwellers do not intend to leave the area, and those considering moving into a detached house do not avoid the area.
On the other hand, high-rise buildings operate under a different mechanism. Against expectations, it is the newer construction rather than the Soviet-era buildings that contribute to the formation of migrant residential concentration areas. In new buildings, migrants are not forced to compete for apartments with those who were granted housing during the Soviet era. Simultaneously, when comparing dormitories of the Soviet period with new buildings with separate apartments, the former tend to have a higher proportion of migrants, as smaller dwellings are more popular with migrants. There are two remarkable examples of this factor in action. In case #6, the former dormitories of the Rostselmash factory and new economy-class blocks of flats contributed to the formation of a prominent migrant residential concentration area. On the contrary, in case #10, it was Soviet-time residential development and its old-time dwellers that among other factors precluded such emergence.
In summary, a higher likelihood of a migrant residential concentration area is ensured when there is a high ratio of the number of migrants in a city to its total population, the bazaar is large and old with a lot of migrant workers, a residential area is adjacent to the bazaar and detached from other areas, the property prices in the area are low, and the area has mostly cheap dormitories and new houses. A perfect example of this combination of factors is case #6—the area called Temernik in Rostov-on-Don.
Case Description: Temernik Area in Rostov-on-Don
Rostov-on-Don, the largest city in Southwest Russia, has a population of 1.1 million people. Originally founded as a small fortress, it underwent significant growth during the late 19th century, leading to the development of a prestigious city center surrounded by low-rise unauthorized construction. The establishment of the Rostselmash factory (Rostov factory for agricultural machines) to the northeast of the city center had a significant effect on the urban development of Soviet-era Rostov-on-Don. Its existence gave rise to the new residential development around the factory, whereas the spare land was occupied by the detached houses. The prominence of major areas of detached houses is marked by the fact that Rostov-on-Don is among the cities of over a million residents with the highest share of this kind of development in Russia (SmartLoc Geomarketing Company 2019). During the last 30 years, new high-rise buildings have emerged across the city including the central part of it as well as the areas surrounding factories and more remote areas.
In the 1980s, high-rise blocks were constructed on the northeast border of the city—in an area known as Temernik. These blocks consisted of apartment-type dormitories (obschezhitiya kvartirnogo tipa)—that is, small studio apartments for Rostselmash factory employees. The post-Soviet period witnessed the emergence of economy-class high-rise buildings in the area. Currently, Temernik is one of the cheapest areas of Rostov-on-Don: it’s ranked in the third quartile for property prices and fourth quartile for rent costs (PwC and Avito Nedvizhimost’ 2018b). The L-shaped area of Temernik is clearly defined by the river Temernik, the “Temernik” bazaar, and a forest (see Figure 1).
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20250208053504059-0592:S009059922400014X:S009059922400014X_fig1.png?pub-status=live)
Figure 1. Temernik area (indicated with a solid line) and the bazaar (indicated with a dashed line). Source: Google Maps (n.d.). https://www.google.com/maps/. (Accessed January 20, 2020).
The bazaar was founded on the previously bare lot of land in the 1990s and gradually took up all the territory between Lelyushenko Street and the block of detached houses. Today, its area equates to about six hectaresFootnote 10 and consists of three de jure independent bazaars (Vostochny, Pervy Temer, and Temernik). According to the website of one of these bazaars, it boasts over 3,000 shops within its premises (Rynok ‘Vostochnyi’ n.d.). Considering this, it can be inferred that the combined number of shops and, significantly, the number of employees in all three bazaars is even higher. A considerable portion of these positions is filled by migrants.
Rostovskaya oblast, the region of which Rostov-on-Don is the capital, holds the 13th position among Russian regions in terms of receiving migrants. However, migrants from Central Asia make up only a small portion of this migrant population and find employment in sectors such as construction, agriculture, and trade. One notable workplace for Central Asian migrants in Rostov-on-Don is the Temernik bazaar.
The bazaar and the residential area near it are kept apart by a busy street with chaotically moving pedestrians and cars (see Figure 2). The street is surrounded by dormitories that were constructed in the Soviet era and new economy-class blocks of apartments, which are the nearest to the bazaar. Newer buildings that are slightly more expensive are situated at a greater distance from the bazaar. The proportion of apartments occupied by migrants in the buildings nearest to the bazaar tends to be at least 40%. However, as one moves further away from the bazaar, the percentage of migrant residents diminishes. For instance, in a new building located 400 meters away from the bazaar, migrants represent a minority, occupying only one out of every six apartments on a floor. The influence of the bazaar’s proximity also extends to the adjacent street of detached houses, where several two- to three-story houses have been converted into hostels or dormitories. However, this effect gradually decreases after five or six streets.
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Figure 2. Lelyushenko Street separating the bazaar (on the left) and the residential area (on the right). Source: Authors’ photograph.
Overall, the concentration of migrants in this area is contingent on the size of the bazaar, reasonably small size of the residential area, and high percentage of dormitories and economy-class new construction. Additional factors are isolation from other areas and location across the street from the bazaar. The area also lacks a tightly knit local community of nonmigrants, which contributes to a lower retention rate of nonmigrant residents. There is a high turnover of new residents in the area as well. Some apartments in the new buildings are allocated to individuals from the city’s accommodation waitlist, who are predominantly nonmigrants. However, these individuals often move out once they observe the presence of migrants among their neighbors.
Discussion and Conclusion
The article shows that there is a pattern of the emergence of migrant residential concentration areas in postsocialist cities and argues that it happens via a combination of seven factors: (1) the number of migrants in a city is large, (2) the bazaar is large and preferably wholesale, (3) the bazaar has been operating in the same place for a long time, (4) there is a residential area within walking distance from the bazaar, (5) the property prices in this residential area are low, (6) the residential area is small to medium in size and detached from other residential areas, and (7) the residential area includes a large share of dormitories and cheap newly constructed apartment blocks. Some of these factors have been discussed in the literature as being important for migrant residential concentration separately such as workplace proximity for the spatial distribution of migrants (Přidalová and Hasman Reference Přidalová and Hasman2018), duration of a bazaar’s operation in the same spot (Klorek and Szulecka Reference Klorek and Szulecka2013; Patzer, Góralska, and Winkowska Reference Patzer, Góralska and Winkowska2015), and proportion of an ethnic group in the area (Allen and Turner Reference Allen and Turner2005). However, as our study shows none of these factors on its own is sufficient for the formation of a migrant residential concentration area in postsocialist cities: it is the combination of factors that is necessary, and once one factor is out, such an area might not emerge. The pattern of such areas’ formation and the necessary combination of factors have not yet been discussed in literature on post-Soviet cities, outlining a lacuna, which this article fills.
Migrant residential concentration areas arising around large bazaars in postsocialist cities of Central and Eastern Europe are often considered distinct from other types of migrant residential concentration that are more conventional such as inner-city ethnic neighborhoods, enclaves, or ethnoburbs (Fiedlerová and Sýkora Reference Fiedlerová and Sýkora2015; Drbohlav and Čermáková Reference Drbohlav and Čermáková2016). Although there can be differences in the characteristics of these types, a deeper reflection on the formation of these types suggests similarities between them. First, the formation of our postsocialist bazaar type resembles that of the inner-city ethnic neighborhoods that existed in U.S. cities of the industrial era: migrants were predominantly employed in factories and service jobs concentrated in the central business district and lived in the cheap housing surrounding this area to save on transportation (Massey Reference Massey1985). As in our case, the formation of these areas, among other factors, was connected to the existence of many migrant workplaces (in our case that is a large wholesale bazaar, factor #2), short distance between workplaces and accommodation (factor #4), and low property prices (factor #5). Next, the types of migrant residential concentration areas in Russia in some respects resemble those of low-income labor migrants in the inner-city neighborhoods of current cities of Asia such as Geylang or until recently Little India in Singapore or Al-Satwa in Dubai. Migrants are attracted there due to cheap housing options (factor #5)—namely, an opportunity to rent a bed in a shared room, sometimes in a kind of hostel (which means a presence of small residential units, which is close to our factor #7), and transport convenience that allows for saving time on commuting (factor #4). Thus, one can find similarities between the formation of postsocialist bazaar-related migrant residential concentration areas and that of other types that are populated with mostly low-income labor migrants. That being said, this resemblance is not complete and some differences between those cases exist.
At the same time, there remain important differences between the postsocialist pattern and formation of other types of migrant residential concentration, such as ethnic neighborhoods in Western European cities. The latter are characterized with predominance of social housing, high unemployment, and different rates of antisocial behavior among youngsters, and they largely emerged due to the states’ actions (such as in France or Sweden). Next, the formation of the postsocialist type can be hardly compared to the emergence of ethnoburbs in Northern America. The ethnoburbs started to emerge after the change of migration policies in the USA and Canada, attracting high-skilled migrants with high socioeconomic status from Asia who were able to afford a house in the suburbs. In our case, it is quite difficult to properly research and describe the situation with poverty in the studied areas of the Russian cities. This is mostly due to the lack of sufficient statistical data, which makes it so that addressing the question of poverty would require additional quantitative research stages. This is why this question has not been in the scope of our research.
Nevertheless, it is important to acknowledge that although we discuss the pattern of migrant residential concentration areas that is characteristic of postsocialist cities, there may be differences between Russia and other countries in Central and Eastern Europe in terms of the characteristics and history of these areas. These differences stem from such aspects as, for example, variances in migration contexts and migrants’ characteristics. For instance, migrant residential concentration areas around large bazaars in Russia are primarily populated by migrants from other post-Soviet republics, whereas in Poland and the Czech Republic, these areas are predominantly populated by Vietnamese migrants. This distinction can have implications for linguistic competencies among first-generation migrants, the level of ethnic diversity within the area, and migrants’ preferences to reside near individuals of the same ethnicity. The second aspect concerns the features of the real estate market and residential development. Although postsocialist cities share a common Soviet urban development heritage, the processes that these cities have undergone in the last three decades have been distinct. For example, in the literature it is noted that the housing stock around a large Vietnamese bazaar in the Sapa site near Prague includes various types of housing such as socialist-era high-rise buildings, new condominiums, old detached houses, and exclusive villas (Fiedlerová and Sýkora, Reference Fiedlerová and Sýkora2015). In contrast, the Russian cases generally do not offer such a wide range of housing options within the same area. These two differences can contribute to the stability or instability of migrant residential concentration areas. Diverse housing options cater to the demands of migrants from different socioeconomic backgrounds. A Vietnamese employee of modest means might share a rental apartment in the most affordable housing, but a prosperous Vietnamese entrepreneur might purchase an exclusive villa within the same area. There is evidence suggesting that Vietnamese migrants in Central and Eastern Europe tend to cluster together, which further contributes to the stability of migrant residential concentration areas. However, based on our limited empirical data some migrants in Russia may opt to move out of bazaar-related migrant residential concentration areas to more expensive and prestigious parts of the city if given the opportunity. Thus, migrant residential concentration areas in Russia could be viewed as temporary accommodation options for migrants associated with the bazaars. At present, we can only hypothesize about the similarities and differences between migrant residential concentration areas in proximity to large bazaars in Russia and other contexts. This topic requires a separate study to gain a deeper understanding.
Financial support
The article was written on the basis of the RANEPA state assignment research programme.
Disclosure
None.
Appendix
Bazaars included in the study.
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