A new interpretation of citizenship in socialist Eastern Europe and non-Western histories of human rights, based upon the vivid social and political history of Roma in Czechoslovakia. Celia Donert rewrites Roma as agents, not victims, of social citizenship, drawing on extensive original research in Czech and Slovak archives.
A new interpretation of citizenship in socialist Eastern Europe and non-Western histories of human rights, based upon the vivid social and political history of Roma in Czechoslovakia. Celia Donert rewrites Roma as agents, not victims, of social citizenship, drawing on extensive original research in Czech and Slovak archives.
Celia Donert is Senior Lecturer at the University of Liverpool. She received her Ph.D. from the European University Institute, Florence, and has held research fellowships in Berlin, Bratislava, Paris, Potsdam, and Prague.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Legacies of 1919 2. Stalinist Gypsy workers 3. But Roma are rural! 4. Cracking down on nomadism 5. Politics get personal 6. Prague Spring for Roma 7. Human rights, minority rights, Roma rights 8. Losing rights after 1989 Conclusion.
Introduction 1. Legacies of 1919 2. Stalinist Gypsy workers 3. But Roma are rural! 4. Cracking down on nomadism 5. Politics get personal 6. Prague Spring for Roma 7. Human rights, minority rights, Roma rights 8. Losing rights after 1989 Conclusion.
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