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How Can a `Nomad' be a `Refugee'?

Kosovo Roma and Labelling Policy in Italy

Nando Sigona

Oxford Brookes University fsigona{at}brookes.ac.uk

Ethnic categories in Kosovo as well as in Italy have been shaped and reshaped according to public politics and local power relations. Focusing on the treatment of the Roma minority, this article examines the complexity of the relationship between labelling and policy in two different contexts: Kosovo and Italy. It highlights the impact that bureaucratic and institutional actors have on the process of identity building of the Roma/Gypsies community. Labels not only contribute actively to the definition of collective identities, but, as instruments of a political system, they express and summarize its structure. The article concludes by emphasizing that labels and policies not only play a role and, in some ways, create the objective of their action, but once they define a group of people as a community, through the allocation of resources, they actually create a community: from `nomads' to nomads.

Key Words: Gypsies • Italy • Kosovo • labelling theory • refugees • Roma

Sociology, Vol. 37, No. 1, 69-79 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0038038503037001445


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