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Roma Activism


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       Map 3.1. The locations of the events described in the chapter

      ABBREVIATIONS

ACDR The Civic Democratic Alliance of the Roma (Romania)
AKP Justice and Development Party (Turkey)
ANR Romanian National Agency for the Roma
CBO Community-Based Organization
CEE Central and Eastern Europe
CHP Republican Peoples’ Party (Turkey)
CoE Council of Europe
CSO Civil Society Organization
DAHR Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania
EANRS European Academic Network of Romani Studies
EC European Commission
ECtHR European Court of Human Rights
EdRom Edirne Roman Association
ERGO European Roma Grassroots Organizations (Network)
ERIAC European Roma Institute for Arts and Culture
ERPC European Roma Policy Coalition
ERRC European Roma Rights Centre
ERTF European Roma and Travellers Forum
ESF European Social Funds
EU European Union
EUJS European Union of Jewish Students
EVS European Voluntary Service
FBO Faith-Based Organization
FER Ethnic Roma Federation
FLAS Foreign Language and Area Studies
FSG Fundación Secretariado Gitano
GLS Gypsy Lore Society
FERYP Forum of European Roma Young People
GRO Grassroots Organization
HDP Peoples’ Democratic Party (Turkey)
HVIM Hungarian Sixty-Four Counties Youth Movement
IDP Internally Displaced Persons
IGO International Governing Organization
IPA Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance
IREX International Research and Exchanges Board
IRU International Romani Union
IST Institute of Turkish Studies
LGBTQ Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer
MHP Nationalist Movement Party (Turkey)
MS Member State(s)
NCCD National Council for Combating Discrimination (Romania)
NGO Non-Governmental Organization
NISR Netherlands Institute for Sinti and Roma
NRIS National Roma Integration Strategies
ODIHR Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
OMC Open Method of Coordination
OSCE Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
OSI Open Society Institute
PKK Kurdistan Worker’s Party
QUANGO Quasi-autonomous Non-Governmental Organization
REF Roma Education Fund
RIRNM Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities
TOKI Turkey’s Housing Administration
UK United Kingdom
UN United Nations
UNDP United Nations Development Program

      PREFACE

       Sam Beck

      This book was imagined in Bucharest, when I was invited to participate in a conference organized by the Roma Cultural Museum in Bucharest in 2014, “Roma Policies in Romania: Between Ethnicity and Social Vulnerability; The Perspectives of Nicolae Gheorghe.” This is where I met Ana Ivasiuc, and where we discussed the importance of Roma activism and scholarship in light of controversies regarding the viability of Roma as scholars, and of activism in scholarship. We held strong views about the importance of demonstrating that the Roma were actively engaged in their struggle for recognition as scholars and in their leadership and participation in Roma liberation, resisting the powerful pressures to give up their identities no matter how they are manifested, and fighting for their dignity.

      Among the individuals who come to mind who entered this struggle, Nicolae Gheorghe managed to play important roles, mediating between the political controls of Romanian communism and those of Roma groups he sought to embolden, and daring to explore their unification in the 1970s, when I was carrying out field research in Transylvania. My relationship with Romania was limited as my ability to enter the country ended (Beck 1992b), my academic career choices narrowed, and I adapted to the changing environment.

      I met Nicolae Gheorghe during my first two years of doctoral research on the history and political economy of an upland Romanian community (1974–76),