How Many Nations Are There in the Russian Federation?
21.02.08
Vienna, February 19 – Residents of the Russian Federation
are so used to hearing that theirs is a extremely multi-national country,
one with more than 100 nations and nationalities, that they seldom give
much though to exactly how many there are and what any particular number
means.
In the current issue of “Demoscope Weekly,” Dmitry Bogoyavlenskiy
says that it may be a good thing that they don’t because professional
demographers know that the number and its meaning are as much a product
of the way information is gathered as a reflection of an existential reality
(http://demoscope.ru/weekly/2008/0319/tema01.php).
And after surveying the history of censuses in the Russian Empire, the
Soviet Union, and post-Soviet Russia, he suggests that if anyone asks just
how many nationalities there are in Russia now, the most accurate answer
is “more than a hundred.” Anything more specific will land those responding
in difficulty.
Most non-demographers assume that census data on nationality provides
an accurate mirror of the ethnic reality of the country, Bogoyavlenskiy
says. But that is not entirely true, because as scholars have shown, censuses
not only measure a reality but help create one.
While all Soviet and Russian censuses have allowed people to declare
their nationality, each of these enumerations has processed the information
in a different way, excluding some answers entirely, group some answers
together, and subsuming one set of identities beneath larger ones.
For the 2002 census, the Moscow demographer writes, officials prepared
a list of some 925 different ethnic identifications that they assumed one
or another Russian citizen might declare and the ways in which these would
be grouped in the course of processing the data.
In the event, citizens of the Russian Federation actually declared themselves
to be members of 776 communities that they deemed to be ethnic or national
but many of which – like Hobbit – were neither. And when census officials
grouped these data, they reduced the number to 182 independent peoples,
including 40 ethnic groups within them.
Thus the actual number of ethnic groups not only depends on which of
these measures one selects but the political choices that the government
makes as to which groups belong to others, choices that individuals learn
from and gradually converge to in most cases.
The same thing was true in all earlier censuses. In the 1926 count,
perhaps the most open of all censuses in that country, people declared
themselves to be members of one of 175 peoples, including four ethnic groups
and six nationalities that ethnographers at that time considered “insufficiently
defined.”
In the 1937 census which Stalin suppressed, there were 109 nationalities
reported. In the 1939 count, there were 99 “nations, national groups,
peoples and nationalities,” thus coming just under the number the Soviet
dictator had said lived in the Soviet Union at that time.
The post-World War II censuses showed relative stability – there were
121 ethnic units in the 1959 count, 122 in the 197o enumeration, and 128
in 1989 – until the post-Soviet census in Russia in 2002 showed a huge
jump either to 142 or 182 depending on how one wants to count.
Many groups have passed into and out of existence as far as the census
and many officials are concerned, as a result of politics rather than any
change in how people define themselves. And consequently, anyone who uses
a Russian census to determine the number of nationalities should remember
how problematic a measure it really is.
Consequently, the real number of nations and nationalities in the Russian
Federation now is very much in the eye of the beholder, and any effort
to add precision to the notion that there are a lot of them almost certainly
will be saying something that reflects one kind of reality but very much
distorts another.
Paul Goble
Source: Window
on Eurasia
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