Exploring the (geo)politics of identity and citizenship in Moldova and Crimea in the wake of Russian annexation.
Eleanor Knott is a political scientist and assistant professor in qualitative methods in the Department of Methodology at the London School of Economics and Political Science.
“In a history of contested borderlands, Kin Majorities is a book
about loss and gain. It looks “bottom-up” beyond states and
ethnicity to meanings and practices. There is a great explicatory
thrust to Knott’s intersectional book in that it should be read for
its methodology, the new categories she has created for the
identity-citizenship space.” The Russian Review
"Kin Majorities has many insights to offer international lawyers,
international relations scholars, and political theorists in
addition to experts on Russian politics, Romanian politics,
post-Soviet affairs, and comparative ethnic conflict." LSE Review
of Books
“An exemplary reminder of the ambiguity, hybridity and multiplicity
of national identity.” Europe-Asia Studies
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