The mutual extraction industry: Drug use and the normative structure of social capital in the Russian far north

Background: The article contributes to the literature on the role of social networks and social capital in young people's drug use. It considers the structural and cultural dimensions of the 'risk environment' of post-Soviet Russia, the micro risk-environment of a deindustrialising ci...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Drug Policy
Main Authors: Pilkington, Hilary, Sharifullina, El'vira
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/1bb2e1f5-8805-4c67-8ab5-2e9cb3891f7c
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2008.08.004
https://pure.manchester.ac.uk/ws/files/28724778/POST-PEER-REVIEW-PUBLISHERS.PDF
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Summary:Background: The article contributes to the literature on the role of social networks and social capital in young people's drug use. It considers the structural and cultural dimensions of the 'risk environment' of post-Soviet Russia, the micro risk-environment of a deindustrialising city in the far north of the country and the kind of social capital that circulates in young people's social networks there. Its focus is thus on social capital at the micro-level, the 'bridging' networks of peer friendship groups and the norms that govern them. Method: The research is based on a small ethnographic study of the friendship groups and social networks of young people in the city of Vorkuta in 2006-2007. It draws on data from 32 respondents aged 17-27 in the form of 17 semi-structured audio and video interviews and field diaries. Respondents were selected from friendship groups in which drug use was a regular and symbolically significant practice. Results: The risk environment of the Russian far north is characterised by major deindustrialisation, poor health indicators, low life expectancy and limited educational and employment opportunities. It is also marked by a 'work hard, play hard' cultural ethos inherited from the Soviet period when risk-laden manual labour was well-rewarded materially and symbolically. However, young people today often rely on informal economic practices to generate the resource needed to fulfil their expectations. This is evident from the social networks among respondents which were found to be focused around a daily routine of generating and spending income, central to which is the purchase, sale and use of drugs. These practices are governed by norms that often invert those normally ascribed to social networks: reciprocity is replaced by mutual exploitation and trust by cheating. Conclusions: Social networks are central to young people's management of the risk environment associated with post-Soviet economic transformation. However, such networks are culturally as well as structurally ...