The East European Gypsies: Regime Change, Marginality, and EthnopoliticsCambridge University Press, 2002 - 408 من الصفحات This book is the first attempt by a social scientist to explain the age-old predicament of Gypsies (or Roma), Eastern Europe's largest ethnic minority, and their relationship to the region's states and societies. Professor Barany comparatively examines the Gypsies' socioeconomic and political marginality and the policies toward them through seven centuries and in seven East European states. He illuminates the reasons why the Roma have consistently occupied the bottom of social, economic, and political hierarchies regardless of historical period or geographic location. |
المحتوى
Introduction | 1 |
THE ANALYTICAL FRAMEWORK | 21 |
Regimes States and Minorities | 23 |
Marginality and Ethnic Mobilization | 49 |
NONDEMOCRATIC SYSTEMS AND GYPSY MARGINALITY | 81 |
The Gypsies in Imperial and Authoritarian States | 83 |
The Roma under StateSocialism | 112 |
THE GYPSIES IN EMERGING DEMOCRACIES | 157 |
Romani Mobilization | 202 |
The International Dimension Migration and Institutions | 241 |
State Institutions and Policies toward the Gypsies | 282 |
Romani Marginality Revisited | 325 |
Conclusion | 354 |
363 | |
389 | |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities anti-Gypsy August authoritarian Balkans Bratislava Bucharest Budapest Bulgaria cigány communist Council Council of Europe countries culture Czech Republic Czechoslovakia democracies democratic discrimination Drom East European Roma Eastern Europe economic Empire ethnic groups ethnic identity ethnic minorities ethnic mobilization Gábor Germany Gypsy activists Gypsy children Gypsy communities Gypsy leaders Gypsy organizations Habsburg Hírlap Holomek Human Rights Hungarian Hungary important instance institutions integration interethnic Interview issue July Kraków Macedonia Magyar majority March marginal groups Marushiakova Ministry minority policies Minority Rights National Minorities Népszabadság NGOs Nicolae Gheorghe non-Roma November officials Ottoman Ottoman Empire Pál Csáky parties Poland political mobilization Porajmos Prague problems programs regime change regime type region Report Research RFE/RL Roma in Bulgaria Roma's romák Romani community Romani language Romani leaders Romani organizations September 1999 Sinti Skopje Slovak Slovakia social socialist society socioeconomic Sofia Soviet state-socialist tion Tomova traditional University Press Vašečka York Yugoslavia Zamfir