Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany

The current claims for asylum and refugee protection of Roma from the so-called “Western Balkan states” are rejected by the German state. Based on this practice, Romani migrants are not recognized as genuine refugees but classified as irregular migrants and thus labeled as “bogus” asylum seekers. Th...

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Main Author: Jure Leko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2017-09-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/894
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spelling doaj-c7d198d9d9d84aaeb5a8a954f07f3a782020-11-24T22:25:29ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032017-09-0153778810.17645/si.v5i3.894536Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in GermanyJure Leko0Käte Hamburger Center for Advanced Study in the Humanities “Law as Culture”, University of Bonn, GermanyThe current claims for asylum and refugee protection of Roma from the so-called “Western Balkan states” are rejected by the German state. Based on this practice, Romani migrants are not recognized as genuine refugees but classified as irregular migrants and thus labeled as “bogus” asylum seekers. This article discusses the discursive process through which the legal status of Romani migrants is irregularized within the German migration regime. Furthermore, through an empirical study, the article shows how Romani organizations and migrants are struggling for a collective right to remain in Germany. In their political-legal struggles for recognition, Roma reinterpret not only their legal status as irregular migrants, but also their legal-cultural practices: by appropriating the semantics of human rights through the lenses of their cultural backgrounds. This, in turn, shifts the analytical focus to the productivity of human rights discourses. They are assumed to be an effective tool to enforce legal claims against the German migration regime. In this context, the article examines legal-cultural practices, which become visible in the struggle, by exploring six justification narratives—through these, the Roma’s political-legal belonging to the German nation-state shall be legitimized.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/894asylumhuman rightsmigrationmigration regimerefugeeRoma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jure Leko
spellingShingle Jure Leko
Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany
Social Inclusion
asylum
human rights
migration
migration regime
refugee
Roma
author_facet Jure Leko
author_sort Jure Leko
title Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany
title_short Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany
title_full Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany
title_fullStr Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany
title_full_unstemmed Migration Regimes and the Translation of Human Rights: On the Struggles for Recognition of Romani Migrants in Germany
title_sort migration regimes and the translation of human rights: on the struggles for recognition of romani migrants in germany
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2017-09-01
description The current claims for asylum and refugee protection of Roma from the so-called “Western Balkan states” are rejected by the German state. Based on this practice, Romani migrants are not recognized as genuine refugees but classified as irregular migrants and thus labeled as “bogus” asylum seekers. This article discusses the discursive process through which the legal status of Romani migrants is irregularized within the German migration regime. Furthermore, through an empirical study, the article shows how Romani organizations and migrants are struggling for a collective right to remain in Germany. In their political-legal struggles for recognition, Roma reinterpret not only their legal status as irregular migrants, but also their legal-cultural practices: by appropriating the semantics of human rights through the lenses of their cultural backgrounds. This, in turn, shifts the analytical focus to the productivity of human rights discourses. They are assumed to be an effective tool to enforce legal claims against the German migration regime. In this context, the article examines legal-cultural practices, which become visible in the struggle, by exploring six justification narratives—through these, the Roma’s political-legal belonging to the German nation-state shall be legitimized.
topic asylum
human rights
migration
migration regime
refugee
Roma
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/894
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