Gender and Violence in Romani and Traveller Lives

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Anthropology
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Category=JBSF
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Collaborative
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Ethics
Ethnography
Europe
Exclusion
Experience
Feminist
feminist ethnography
Gender
Gypsy
Institutions
Interdisciplinary
intersectionality research
Marginalisation
marginalised communities gender violence
Methodology
Minority
Oppression
Policy
qualitative fieldwork
Reflexive
Roma
Romani
Romani studies
social exclusion
structural oppression
Traveller
Violence
Women

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032629254
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Jul 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This is the first interdisciplinary collection to analyse the place of Romanies and Travellers within contemporary Europe through the lens of gender and violence. In hospitals, schools, and social assistance centres; in encounters with humanitarian agencies and the police; and in media and state representations, violence against Romanies and Travellers is always gendered. The contributors disentangle the array of relations, expectations, and beliefs that make gendered violences against Romanies and Travellers appear necessary, unavoidable, or appropriate. They examine forms of gendered violence that may develop within Romani and Traveller communities against this framework of oppression and attrition.

The volume foregrounds the methodological and ethical challenges involved in researching gendered violences in Romani and Traveller contexts, questioning the relationships between gender, violence, and other experiences and concepts such as marginalisation, oppression, exclusion, harm, slow death, social suffering, and necropolitics. The volume is grounded in reflexive feminist standpoints with a collaborative ethos that offers proposals for further analysis, policy development, and engaged practice. It contributes to the theorising of gendered violence in the social sciences by assessing dominant models and perspectives in the light of overlooked Romani and Traveller experiences, and is particularly relevant to scholars from anthropology, gender studies, sociology, and social work.

Paloma Gay Blasco is a senior lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of St Andrews, UK.

Iliana Sarafian is a lecturer in Medical Anthropology at University College London, UK.

Raluca Roman is a lecturer in Social Anthropology at Queen’s University Belfast, UK.