A Contemporary History of Exclusion The Roma Issue in Hungary from 1945 to 2015

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Majtenyi, Balázs (-)
Otros Autores: Majtenyi, György
Formato: Libro electrónico
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Budapest : Central European University Press 2015.
Colección:Muse OA ebooks.
Acceso en línea:Conectar con la versión electrónica
Ver en Universidad de Navarra:https://innopac.unav.es/record=b45058775*spi
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Introduction: Contexts of Gypsy/Roma identity and history
  • On the sources of Gypsy/Roma history
  • Who (what) is (was) Hungarian or Gypsy/Roma?
  • "Comrades, if you have a heart" : the history of the Gypsy issue, 1945-1961
  • The construction and spread of the state socialist system
  • Policy and Gypsies
  • Modernization and Gypsy communities
  • Disciplinary state
  • The impossibility of self-organization
  • Minority issue
  • Discourses on social policy and equality
  • "Life goes on" : the Hungarian party-state and assimilation
  • Social policy and the Gypsies
  • Wage work
  • Housing
  • Social system
  • Education
  • Scientific approaches
  • Gypsy images
  • The transformation of discourse
  • Disciplinary power, disciplinary society
  • Police and agents
  • "Health supervisors"
  • The national minority issue
  • National movement
  • The "ethnic interpretation" of history
  • Roma policy after the regime change
  • Minority issue
  • Prospects for multiculturalism
  • Minority (self-)government?
  • Divide at Impera : the opportunities and impossibilities of self-organization
  • Movement
  • National minority culture, national culture
  • Questions of equal treatment and equal opportunity
  • Anti-discrimination
  • Equal opportunity
  • Roma programs
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Social policy and the Roma
  • Aid
  • Segregation
  • Disciplinary society
  • The transformation of discourses
  • Research methods
  • Panopticon : Roma policy, 2010-2015
  • The Hungarian National Cooperation System
  • The anti-egalitarian character of the system
  • Changing minority legislation
  • New social policy?
  • Violence
  • The shift
  • Summary: Decades of exclusion.