Nationalities Papers
Volume 31, Issue 1, 2003, Pages 13-26
Round and round the roundabout: Czech Roma and the vicious circle of asylum-seeking (Article)
Castle-Kaněrová M.*
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a
[Affiliation not available]
Abstract
This article follows earlier discussions about the current status of Romani refugees and migrants within Europe and the role of human rights in the process of accession of Central European states to the European Union (EU), in the Cambridge Review of International Affairs, Volume 13, Number 2. Romani migration opens up central issues of democratisation in Eastern Europe and of the role played by the EU in shaping that process. Human rights appear to have been accorded secondary importance and were replaced by the political doctrines of accession as efforts to manage and control migration, particularly of so-called undesirable migrants, such as the Roma, have reached a hiatus. The argument offered here is that discrimination of the Roma has been defined as no more than a social problem so that governments, both East and West, can proceed with the political agenda of enlargement. To demonstrate this point, the article reviews some Czech governmental documentation related to the treatment of Roma and places it within the context of the debate around accession within the broader framework of EU harmonisation of immigration policies.
Author Keywords
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Index Keywords
Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0038304199&doi=10.1080%2f0090599032000058884&partnerID=40&md5=09b0e08f6a3841b30de575679e737690
DOI: 10.1080/0090599032000058884
ISSN: 00905992
Cited by: 3
Original Language: English