Vytautas Magnus University Research Management System (VDU CRIS)





3. Mokslo žurnalai / Research Journals

Permanent URI for this communityhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12259/261291

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  • Item type:Publication,
    Neo-Pagan youth groups in Saint Petersburg Russia
    [Neopagonių jaunimo grupės Rusijoje (Sankt Peterburge)]
    research article[2010]
    Sharifullina, Elvira
    ;
    Omel'chenko, Elena
    ;
    Pilkington, Hilary
    Grupės ir aplinkos / Groups and Environments, 2010, no. 2, p. 89-97

    Literature to date on the neo-Pagan movement in Russia has focused on understanding the movement as a form of “escape” and evaluating the relative “harm” posed to individuals and society by such organisations. This research focused on the everyday manifestation and reproduction of Slavic neo-Pagan groups in St. Petersburg. The research suggested that, as the Slavic neo-Pagan movement struggled to establish an agreed set of principles and practices, disagreements focused on the relative weight of its ideological and cultural components and that particular communities of neo-Pagans had become organised around their position in relation to these discourses.

      22  51
  • Item type:Publication,
    Drug using youth groups in Vorkuta Russia
    [Narkotikus vartojančios jaunimo grupės Vorkutoje (Rusijoje)]
    research article[2010]
    Sharifullina, Elvira
    ;
    Omel'chenko, Elena
    ;
    Pilkington, Hilary
    Grupės ir aplinkos / Groups and Environments, 2010, no. 2, p. 169-174

    Drug use within the youth cultural environment is widespread and unremarkable; this means that drug users can rarely be considered to constitute distinct “subcultures”. In the context of processes of de-industrialisation and marketisation, drugs are a key commodity for sale and exchange. In the tough economic climate of the Russian far north – where geographical location means that hemp and opium based drugs cannot be locally grown, and supply routes are truncated by poor transportation links – they may become a key component of the informal economy. A key finding of this research was that the sale of drugs was one of a range of “hustling” practices – including trade in “acquired” goods and drugs, money-lending and “sorting” disputes – that were widespread among young people, whether or not they used drugs themselves.

      21  61