B. Volker et H. Flap, THE COMRADES BELIEF - INTENDED AND UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF COMMUNISM FOR NEIGHBORHOOD RELATIONS IN THE FORMER GDR, European sociological review, 13(3), 1997, pp. 241-265
Marxist societies were experiments not only in destratification but al
so in openness and cohesion. Of all relationships a political regime m
ight use to create 'friendship between classes: those among neighbours
may be most prone to manipulation. We examine how relationships among
neighbours in the former GDR were affected by the regime's housing po
licy of mixing people of different classes. Our retrospective data wer
e collected in May 1992 (n = 189) and in April 1993 (n = 300) among tw
o random samples of respondents in Leipzig and Dresden. While the comm
unist regime was very successful at creating neighbourhoods of mixed s
ocial composition, its housing policy failed to create friendship betw
een classes. Meeting did not lead to mating: next-door neighbours were
socially distinct and hardly socialized with each other. The few exis
ting ties in the neighbourhood were largely restricted to similar othe
rs. We understand these shallow and homogeneous neighbourhood networks
as the unintended effect of the party's political control of private
life: one would be unlikely to invest in relations that posed a threat
and with individuals one did not trust, such as neighbours, who were
dissimilar to oneself and who, because they lived next-door, knew abou
t one's private life as well. Analysis shows furthermore that being a
neighbour and having a dissimilar occupation increases the chance of b
eing distrusted.