Culture, Modernization, and Politics: Ethnic Differences in Union Formation in Kyrgyzstan
Culture, modernisation et politiques: différences ethniques dans la formation des unions au Kirghizstan
Victor Agadjanian () and
Premchand Dommaraju
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Victor Agadjanian: Arizona State University
Premchand Dommaraju: Nanyang Technological University
European Journal of Population, 2011, vol. 27, issue 1, No 4, 79-101
Abstract:
Abstract The unique cultural and political history of Central Asia has produced intriguing ethnic variations in union formation. We use data from a survey of 1,535 young adults conducted in 2005 in northern Kyrgyzstan to examine ethnic patterns of entry into marriage versus cohabitation. To reflect the historic-cultural and political realities of Kyrgyzstan, we subdivide ethnic Kyrgyz into two categories based on the degree of linguistic Russification—more-Russified Kyrgyz and less-Russified Kyrgyz—and compare them to each other and to respondents of European origin. The results of the multinomial discrete-time logit models show significant differences among the three groups. Thus, Europeans were most likely to enter cohabitation whereas less-Russified Kyrgyz were least likely to do so, net of other factors. The three groups were lined up in the converse order with respect to probability of entering marriage, but upon breakdown by gender this ordering was present only among women. In contrast, among men, more-Russified Kyrgyz were less likely to marry than both less-Russified Kyrgyz and Europeans. We interpret these findings in light of long-term historic-cultural and demographic distinctions as well as more recent politically induced cleavages in Kyrgyzstan.
Keywords: Union formation; Marriage; Cohabitation; Ethnicity; Central Asia; Kyrgyzstan; Formation des unions; Mariage; Cohabitation; Appartenance ethnique; Asie centrale; Kirghizstan (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)
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DOI: 10.1007/s10680-010-9225-7
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