A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in Transmigration

he paper considers the ambiguity of the term ‘guest worker’, based on the example of economic migrants who belong to the Roma population. Over the last fifty years, members of the Roma minority have migrated to Western European countries for different reasons (economic, political and social reasons)...

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Main Author: Ana Banić-Grubišić
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Belgrade 2016-03-01
Series:Etnoantropološki Problemi
Online Access:http://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/564
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spelling doaj-8a2d708dbd334d2eb856e64e0d3ab4662020-11-24T22:51:22ZengUniversity of BelgradeEtnoantropološki Problemi 0353-15892334-88012016-03-016410351054562A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in TransmigrationAna Banić-Grubišić0Institut za etnologiju i antropologiju Filozofski fakultet Univerzitet u Beograduhe paper considers the ambiguity of the term ‘guest worker’, based on the example of economic migrants who belong to the Roma population. Over the last fifty years, members of the Roma minority have migrated to Western European countries for different reasons (economic, political and social reasons), and there is no official data on the precise number of Roma who have migrated abroad, whether permanently or temporarily. It is possible to establish a number of categories of Roma immigrants who reside permanently or temporarily in Western European countries. These are: the so-called “classic guest workers” who, through legal or illegal means went to work abroad in the 60’s and 70’s, and mostly settled permanently in the host countries; Roma refugees from Kosovo and/or asylum seekers who left the country during the wars in the 90’s, and who were returned to Serbia after the signing of the Readmission treaty; and those Roma who represent occasional economic migrants: people who, after Serbia was put on the white Schengen list (the liberalization of the visa policy for citizens of Serbia), spend three months at a time working abroad. Even though these three categories of Roma workers have different reasons for migrating from and returning to Serbia, the majority of the population perceives them as a unified, distinct whole – as guest workers. The paper is the result of fieldwork conducted in South-Eastern Serbia, in the village of Minicevo.http://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/564
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana Banić-Grubišić
spellingShingle Ana Banić-Grubišić
A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in Transmigration
Etnoantropološki Problemi
author_facet Ana Banić-Grubišić
author_sort Ana Banić-Grubišić
title A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in Transmigration
title_short A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in Transmigration
title_full A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in Transmigration
title_fullStr A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in Transmigration
title_full_unstemmed A Different Guest Worker Story: Roma Guest Workers – a Transnational Minority in Transmigration
title_sort different guest worker story: roma guest workers – a transnational minority in transmigration
publisher University of Belgrade
series Etnoantropološki Problemi
issn 0353-1589
2334-8801
publishDate 2016-03-01
description he paper considers the ambiguity of the term ‘guest worker’, based on the example of economic migrants who belong to the Roma population. Over the last fifty years, members of the Roma minority have migrated to Western European countries for different reasons (economic, political and social reasons), and there is no official data on the precise number of Roma who have migrated abroad, whether permanently or temporarily. It is possible to establish a number of categories of Roma immigrants who reside permanently or temporarily in Western European countries. These are: the so-called “classic guest workers” who, through legal or illegal means went to work abroad in the 60’s and 70’s, and mostly settled permanently in the host countries; Roma refugees from Kosovo and/or asylum seekers who left the country during the wars in the 90’s, and who were returned to Serbia after the signing of the Readmission treaty; and those Roma who represent occasional economic migrants: people who, after Serbia was put on the white Schengen list (the liberalization of the visa policy for citizens of Serbia), spend three months at a time working abroad. Even though these three categories of Roma workers have different reasons for migrating from and returning to Serbia, the majority of the population perceives them as a unified, distinct whole – as guest workers. The paper is the result of fieldwork conducted in South-Eastern Serbia, in the village of Minicevo.
url http://eap-iea.org/index.php/eap/article/view/564
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