The contributors are leading activists, politicians, and scholars involved in critical debates and policy making vis-à-vis Romani citizens. This book sheds light on experiences of political participation of Romani citizens in both Eastern and Western Europe, thus contributing to a deeper understanding of the political space that Roma occupy in states within an enlarged EU. As a response to their increasing social marginalization, human and minority rights discourses and regimes have emerged, consolidating alongside an embryonic Romani political movement. Amongst them are millions of Roma, for whom chronic unemployment and social exclusion have become the norm. A by-product of this phenomenon has been increasing marginalization of groups which do not ‘fit’ the new socio-economic regime. The new geopolitical order has affirmed a neo-liberal economic doctrine throughout Europe. The restructuring of post-WWII welfare systems, the disintegration of Yugoslavia through a series of fratricidal wars, the rise of racist and nationalist movements, and the enlargement of NATO and of the EU to include former socialist countries after the end of the Cold War characterize this period. Europe in the last two decades has gone through unprecedented political, social, and economic transformations.
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