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Ready to go! The next generation of mobile highly skilled workforce in the Russian petroleum industry

Author(s)
Gertrude Saxinger, Elisabeth Öfner, Elvira Shakirova, Maria Ivanova, Maksim Yakovlev, Eduard Gareyev
Abstract

This article provides insights into the motivation of future highly skilled workers to become long-distance commuters (LDC) (i.e. fly-in/fly-out [FIFO]/drive-in/drive-out [DIDO]) to remote Arctic and Subarctic petroleum extraction sites. The study draws on a sample of students from long-distance commuter families, who study at the Ufa State Petroleum Technical University (UGNTU) in the Republic of Bashkortostan: a primary LDC sending region in Russia. The study is based on ethnographic qualitative and quantitative research. It shows that LDC shift work is seen as both a socio-economic necessity and a prospering career by half of the respondents. The readiness for long-distance commuting was nearly equal among male and female students. Furthermore, it is an attractive form of gaining a livelihood, especially in rural regions like those in the Republic of Bashkortostan with a competitive labour market and poor socio-economic development. On the other hand, the repeated separation from family, long travel times, inconvenient life in camps as well as health and safety concerns were cited as deterrents for the other half of the respondents. The article highlights disparities between urban and rural areas as well as between those in full-time LDC and those commuting to earn additional income to supplement their regular agricultural work.

Organisation(s)
Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology
External organisation(s)
Irkutsk National Research Technical University, Ufa State Petroleum Technical University
Journal
The Extractive Industries and Society
Volume
3
Pages
627–639
No. of pages
13
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.exis.2016.06.005
Publication date
2016
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
504009 Ethnology
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Geography, Planning and Development, Economic Geology, Development, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/75a5d175-26e2-4a24-95f4-e3f34b8d1b83