2019. október 17., csütörtök

Roma Identity and Ethnic Mobilisation in Central European Politics


https://ecpr.eu/Filestore/PaperProposal/bc37f19f-a31e-4c91-b155-d382d1bd2043.pdf

Roma Identity and Ethnic Mobilisation in Central European Politics 
Paper prepared for the workshop on identity politics ECPR joint sessions Grenoble, 6-11 April 2001


Introduction

To what extent does the process of political mobilisation have an impact upon a minority’s conceptions of ethnic identity? In many descriptions of ethnic politics and ethnic conflict authors tend to apply the term ‘ethnic identity’ as a stable and ‘natural’ source of political identification. They tend to treat the ethnic group as an unchanging entity and perceive ethnic identity as a group characteristic that pre-exists political action. In particular with regard to the developments in central and eastern Europe since the end of the 1980s ‘ethnicity’ has increasingly come to serve as a way of explaining political conflict (Taylor 1996 : 889). But the question of how conceptions of ethnic identity are actually produced and contested within an ethnic movement and to what extent they are subject to constraint and facilitation rarely reaches the research agenda. 

This seems somewhat at odds with social constructivist approaches to identity in contemporary social movement research (e.g. Calhoun 1991). There it has been emphasised that identity should be regarded as the changing product of a social process through which membership criteria are constantly re-elaborated. Group identity, it is argued there, is produced and continuously re-defined by the process of collective action itself (della Porta and Diani 1999 : 87). Likewise, in social anthropology the notion of ethnic identity has been problematised. A widely discussed text by Barth (1969), for example, defined ethnic identity in terms of social boundary: the ethnic group is produced through social interaction by a practice of self and hetero-ascription and is not an entity with permanent cultural characteristics (see also Roosens 1998; Jenkins 1997). Moreover, in a more recent article Barth (1994) has suggested that the creation of ethnicity not only takes place on the interpersonal level, but is also deeply influenced by collective action (median level) and state policies (macro level). 

In this paper I intend to examine the construction of a specific ethnic identity (‘Roma’ identity) within the context of political mobilisation in central Europe (CE). In order to do this I will focus on discourses of Roma identity, i.e. on the way in which various political actors have attributed meaning to the idea of Roma identity. By centring on the formulations of ethnic identity, this research avoids the question ‘what is ethnic (Roma) identity’ but rather focuses on the process of how this ethnic identity functions as a cognitive frame for political mobilisation in a given political context. 

For a number of reasons the Roma minority in CE provides an interesting case. First of all, through the activities of ethnically-based interest organisations the Roma have since 1989 engaged in a process of political mobilisation against oppression and marginalisation. This has been a remarkable development, because it is now for the first time that on such a wide geographical scale a variety of stigmatised communities apply the concept of ‘Roma identity’, seeking to capture the attention of both domestic and international politicians and media. Their case offers thus the opportunity to look at a recently emerged ethnic movement in a specific political situation (post-communism). Furthermore, among Roma activists and in scholarly literature about Roma and comparable groups, the definition or even the idea of Roma identity is intensely debated (e.g. Fraser 2000; Gheorghe 1997; Lucassen et al 1998). These discussions may theoretically offer movement actors various possibilities to perceive or shape their ‘project identities’. Moreover, the Roma offer an interesting perspective into the way in which international context has affected domestic identity formation in CE. Specifically in the framework of the EU enlargement process, this case provides us with the opportunity to compare the impact of international attention across different countries.

This paper consists of three parts. The first part describes the historical background of the emergence of Roma political activism in the 1990s in post-communist CE, concretely in the Czech and Slovak Republics. The overview also includes a brief explanation of why exactly these two countries were selected for my field research. In the second part of the paper the concept of ‘framing processes’ (e.g. Benford and Snow 2000) is introduced as an analytical tool to interpret the various descriptions of Roma identity in the sources. The data which form the basis of the research consist mainly of summaries and transcripts of interviews with representatives of the Czech and Slovak ‘Roma elite’ (31) conducted during three months of field research in 2000. The data also include policy documents about the Roma produced by governmental bodies and a collection of statements and speeches by politicians in power. Third, the paper explores similarities and differences in the various actors’ descriptions of Roma identity as a mobilising or countermobilising frame. It will specifically focus on whether competing formulations of Roma identity by Roma actors can be linked to the political opportunities that are presented by the political environment. To conclude, the paper shortly dwells on the question of which consequences crucial framing disputes within the movement and counterframings by agencies in power may have for the resonance of Roma identity as a successful basis for collective action.

The Roma Movement in the Czech and Slovak republics

Although far from being exclusively a post-1989 phenomenon, the Roma movement has known a rapid and spectacular development after the fall of communism in CE. Since the beginning of the 1990s the number of Roma associations and Roma political parties continuously increased.1 But not only the impressive organisational growth is indicative. During the last decade Roma activists and emerging Roma political elites across several European countries more clearly than ever before attempted to promote new ideas about Roma ethnicity. They also tried to enhance the political participation of their constituencies and aspired to influence national policy making on minorities. Gheorghe and Mirga (1998) call it an ‘ethnic awakening’ and a rise of ‘Roma ethnonationalism’, which they describe as a ‘transition [of a social group] toward an ethnically mobilised group, having a common stance and interest’. 

Puxon (2000: 94) argues that with the end of communism ‘[the] shocking increase in anti-Gypsy violence and racial intolerance, evident throughout Europe, has begun to politicise and unite a new generation to a degree not seen before.’ It is no doubt true that deteriorating social conditions and the increase of anti-Roma behaviour in post-communist societies have coincided with the increase of Roma movement activities. But reality is perhaps too much reduced when anti-Roma violence is perceived as the only factor leading to the emergence of the Roma movement. 

Another part of the explanation presumably lies in the circumstances of the post-1989 period which offered Roma individuals unprecedented opportunities to establish interest organisations. First of all, being able to build alliances with dissident organisations they gained support from the new elite. In Czechoslovakia, for example, Roma played an active part in the anticommunist movement and joined the coalition parties that overwhelmingly won the first democratic elections2 . Later, their ethnic claims received symbolic support from international and domestic human rights organisations.3 Central European states were particularly sensitive to the discourse of human rights norms because they realised this was becoming a key issue pertaining to their standing in the international community (especially vis-à-vis the EU). Furthermore, the new political environment of post-communism, which saw the emergence of ethnically more homogeneous states, apparently functioned as a breeding ground for ethnopolitical mobilisation in general. Ethnic cleavages gave rise to political party formation and mainstream political parties started in some cases to voice certain claims in ethnic-particularistic terms to buttress a general process of nation-building. Consequently, it is not surprising that ethnic minorities such as the Roma, many of them being losers of the political and economic transition, began to emphasise a sense of collective political identity. They started to lodge complaints explicitly in the name of the ethnic group and urged upon their governments the need for new policy initiatives to tackle the socio-economic marginalisation of their communities and to eradicate anti-Roma racism. 

One of the striking aspects, however, is that the term ‘Roma’ has been constructed and promoted to encompass a variety of communal based identities across different countries. In the Czech and Slovak Republics, for example, descriptions suggest that there are various self-designations in use (e.g. Servika, Romungro, Vlach, Sinti) on the basis of markers like language or traditions. The semantic relationship between such labels is complex (Hübschmannová 1999). In sum, the word ‘Roma’ (meaning ‘human being’ in Romanes) is certainly not a generalising self-appellation (as the word ‘gypsy’ is a generalising external appellation – a so-called exonym). 

The usage of the word ‘Roma’ as a political overarching name was first advocated by interest organisations in Western Europe at the end of the 1960s and the beginning of the 1970s. Activists from different countries started to adjust their claims to each other and agreed in 1971 on a common platform called the World Roma Congress (WRC) that was aimed inter alia at changing dominant thinking about the people these activists wanted to represent. The first WRC later served as a direct inspiration for the goal orientation of international mobilising structures like the International Roma Union (IRU) and the Roma National Congress (RNC). One of the ideas which was kept from the 1970s was the replacement of negative sounding terms like ‘gypsies’ or ‘tsiganes’ with ‘Roma’. The dissemination of the ‘new’ ethnic label (and the eradication of ‘old’ social designations) was considered especially necessary with regard to the pragmatics of the words for ‘gypsy’ in the central European languages (e.g. ‘cikán’ in Czech, ‘cygan’ in Slovak and ‘cigány’ in Hungarian): unlike the English word ‘gypsy’ or the Dutch word ‘zigeuner’ these names were invariably used in a derogatory way (Leudar and Nekvapil 2000: 489; Stewart 1997: 113)4 . Focusing on this aspect, one could say that as of the 1970s Roma movement organisations have been actively engaged in triggering a process of ‘ethnogenesis’ – a process which has gained momentum after the fall of communism.

The Czech Republic and Slovakia serve as two very instructive cases. Both countries witnessed the rapid emergence of a Roma movement within a post-communist setting. The movement consisted of informal elements, like communal-based protests or personal networks among activists. But from the early 1990s onwards there was also an upsurge of various sorts of formal movement elements. These included not only organisations that directly mobilised their constituency for collective action, but also a broad assortment of supportive organisations (like human rights organisations), ‘self-help’ organisations that addressed certain direct needs of the constituency, and even Roma political parties. A number of Roma politicians also tried to achieve political representation through their involvement in mainstream political parties.

However, throughout the 1990s the Roma movement has continuously struggled with obstacles hindering mass mobilisation. Especially in the isolated settlements in Eastern Slovakia, but also in other areas it proved difficult to find movement supporters and ethnic voters. After the elections of 1992, when the anticommunist alliance had splintered, Roma political representation on national level disappeared almost completely5 . Roma elites became increasingly articulate, but the gap between them and their constituencies in many cases proved to be unbridgeable. The elites were simply not known among local communities or their legitimacy as representatives was severely contested.  

The Czech and Slovak Roma elites have also grappled with the reluctance of many Roma to identify themselves as Roma in the public sphere. This is well illustrated by the discussion surrounding the 1991 census. The official 1991 census figure for the Roma population was 80,627 (1.5 per cent) in the Slovak and 32,903 (0.3 per cent) in the Czech part – this being the result of the first census in which the Roma of the Czechoslovak Federal Republic (ČSFR) obtained the right to proclaim themselves as a distinct national minority. However, both the Czech and Slovak government have admitted that the actual rate of people who identify themselves as Roma in daily life must be substantially higher (Vláda ČR 1999a; Slovak Government 1999). Independent researchers and Roma organisations claim that the Roma in fact account for around 7 to 8 per cent (up to 500,000) of the Slovak citizens and around 3 per cent (up to 250,000) of the Czech citizens (Liégeois 1994: 34; Druker 1997: 22-23; Kenrick 1998: 187). 

Low official rates of Roma identification do not necessarily indicate, as some authors have suggested, a ‘low level of ethnic awareness’ among Roma (Plichtová 1993:17). Other authors for example, have explained this by referring to bureaucratic irregularities during the official registration (Druker 1998) or the lack of will on the part of the Roma to register as ‘Roma’ in fear of some kind of reprisal (Clarck 1998). Guy (1998: 35) has also pointed out the possible impact of historical experience. Administrators in communist times were prone to describe the Roma as a social rather than an ethnic group as this gave them a freer hand with implementing policies of assimilation. As a consequence of the historical tendency of the authorities to avoid the word ‘gypsy’ and to deny Roma nationality, it is plausible that administrators during the first census implicitly discouraged people to identify themselves officially as Roma. Although it is difficult to establish the definitive influence of all these factors, the discussion at least points to a potential problem surrounding the public ‘image’ of Roma identity. 

In the context of these phenomena, both countries provide interesting cases for studying the formation of Roma identity in relation to the political environment. One wonders, for instance, how the Roma elite has reacted to the problem of public identification and what effects their reaction has had for the formation of Roma identity. Furthermore, a comparison of the two countries will allow to explore differences of political context that could account for identity differentiation within the group.

Ethnic identity and collective mobilisation: a conceptual bridge

Before embarking on a more detailed exploration of Roma identity politics in the Czech and Slovak Republics, it is no doubt necessary to consider some conceptual underpinnings of this study. When examining Roma identity formation from a constructivist angle, one may assume a correspondence between the production of Roma ethnic identity and the current political mobilisation of the Roma. How can this correspondence be described? 

In general, the close relationship between identity and collective mobilisation has been discussed by many scholars engaged in social movement research. Della Porta and Diani, for example, state that ‘[c]ollective action cannot occur in the absence of a ‘we’ characterized by common traits and a specific solidarity’ (della Porta and Diani 1999: 87). Many scholars agree that there is a two-way relationship between social identification and collective action. Identity construction not simply precedes collective action. The formation of identity is a process that is shaped through collective action. Della Porta and Diani (1999: 87-91) describe three important mechanisms through which this happens: collective action defines and redefines the boundaries between actors in a conflict, it engenders networks of relationships of trust, and it offers a continuing sense of belonging. Similar considerations can easily apply to the production ethnic identity. Even in the case where there are seemingly ‘objective’ historical and cultural foundations of identity, as is the case with ethnic identity, the boundaries of this identity are continuously reconstituted in the light of the present circumstances. An ethnic minority is thus not simply a group of people differing from the rest of society in terms of language and tradition, but rather the result of a process in which such differences are perceived as socially and politically meaningful. 

When studying the mutual relationship between ethnic identity formation and collective mobilisation, it will be useful to concentrate on the following three aspects of this relationship. First, it is useful to see ethnic mobilisation as a form of cognitive praxis. The latter term has been used by Eyerman and Jamison (1991) to describe the creative process of knowledge production in which any social movement is engaged. The authors contend that precisely the cognitive aspect of collective action defines the identity of a social movement. This also applies to ethnic movements: they produce and promote new understandings and interpretations of perceived reality (in casu markers of ethnic difference). In other words: ethnic movement actors are ‘signifying agents’ (Benford and Snow 2000: 613) who attempt to promote new understandings and interpretations of their ethnic identity. Precisely these understandings and interpretations are crucial to the study of ethnic identity formation.

Second, ethnic identity can be seen as a semantic category that is realised through articulation. Thus, not the ethnic group as an entity is central to my understanding of the phenomenon of ethnic politics, but the way ethnic identity is constructed in language. This discourse approach is based on the view that ‘language events’ are in fact the symbolic constructs that we use to understand and actualise reality (Donati 1992 : 138). This means that in this research I will concentrate on the discursive aspect of ethnic mobilisation: the way movement actors describe Roma identity in their public discourse. Ethnic identity, in this sense, serves as a semantic category that is constantly subjected to the manoeuvres of actors who are trying to persuade others to see their identity as they understand it is.

Third, the construction of identity is not merely the result of a ‘rhetoric’ promulgated by ethnic movement actors. It is also a process that is conditioned by factors belonging to the historical and political environment. In other words, one can assume that the presence, salience and meaning of ethnic identity is affected by a number of factors that are not deliberately crafted by movement actors in their strategic action. These are less controllable factors resulting from the context, such as the way ‘common knowledge’ or ‘traditional knowledge’ about ethnic identity is treated and reproduced in media and politics. In the this paper the area of political discourse is considered of great interest. This can be seen as an expression of the structure of power relations surrounding the movement. 

A concept suited to examine the production of ethnic identity which pays attention to cognitive, strategic and contextual aspects, is offered in contemporary social movement research in the notion of ‘framing’. Framing has been described by Benford and Snow (2000: 626) as the generation and diffusion by movement actors of mobilising and countermobilising ideas and meanings. The concept of framing, however, also recognises that this process is not taking place in a vacuum. It is sensitive to the fact that it is to a certain degree shaped by the complex, multi-organisational, multi-institutional arenas in which it takes place. It is acknowledged that the resonance of framing is affected by the cultural and political environment, ‘including the framing/counterframings of the institutional elites’.

One way of researching the signifying struggle in which Roma actors are involved would be to look at the media (as a mirror of public opinion). Media has no doubt a profound influence on the resonance of the collective action frames of the Roma movement. But the study of media framing does not offer us a view on how Roma activists themselves attempt to conceptualise their movement identity. For this reason, this research will concentrate on framing processes triggered by the elite. I will prefer to concentrate on formulations of Roma ethnic identity by the actors themselves and how they are developing in relation to conceptions of Roma identity constructed by agencies in power. These aspects are interesting because they have not been frequently studied. Such an approach may also offer us a better understanding of how factors of power and domination have influenced this process.

I concentrate on the political elite because I assume that it has an important role to play in shaping the categorisation of ethnic groups. Conover and Hicks (1998: 25) have argued that political elites can produce either a more destructive and a more constructive social and political environment by ‘substantially altering the understanding and saliency of these groups’. The process of social construction of ethnicity takes place in various informal and formal contexts of which that of politics is no doubt a very important one. Politics provides a platform for the mass mobilisation of ethnicity and can directly influence public rhetoric, legislative and administrative acts or the distribution of resources. For this reason, this research focuses on the framing of Roma identity by the Roma elite and on the framing of Roma identity by the policy makers. 

Roma identity and frame alignment in Roma activist discourse

Scholarship about itinerant populations, gypsies, Roma and other comparable groups has produced a dubious legacy. In many cases both academic and non-academic attempts to define these groups have produced and stimulated popular stereotypical thinking about them as deviants, outcasts or romantic outsiders. These studies more than once contributed to the categorisation and subsequently the stigmatisation of ‘gypsies’ as a stable and inherently inferior group. Lucassen, Willems and Cottaar (1998) recognise two dominant paradigms in the literature – one which defines these groups in terms of social status (criminality, marginality and poverty), and one which views them as a group with a common exotic, non-European origin. The latter categorisation seems to be in many ways the result of an ethnographic tradition of examining ‘gypsies’ (while at the same time defining and constructing the very category of ‘gypsies’). Willems (1995; 1998) argues that authoritative popular scientific texts in various time periods have created the dominant essentialist understanding of the ‘gypsies’ as a stable entity that is foreign to European culture and societies.

Since 1989 a growing body of descriptions of the way Roma were treated in the new democracies of CE became available to the regional specialist. The question of the production of Roma identity itself was rarely addressed. However, these descriptions contained different assumptions about what constitutes Roma identity. Often the Roma in CE were conceptualised as somewhere between an ‘immigrant minority’ and a ‘national minority’, but neither of the two types exactly, because it was observed that only a limited number of them had migrated in recent times and that they did not have a connection to an external homeland. In the large majority of the descriptions the alleged Indian origin served as a main source for identifying them.

Given the wide range of conceptualisations of the ‘Roma’ that scholars have come up with, it is perhaps not at all surprising that activists too have different ways in which they think about the group they aspire to represent. Exploration of the interviews with Roma activists in the Czech and Slovak republics and texts produced by Roma interest organisations led to the observation that in both countries mainly three types of Roma identity frames are used to describe and warrant Roma collective action and Roma-based claims-making. These frames can be regarded as the conscious efforts of people who regard themselves as ‘leaders’ or ‘representatives’ to enhance a certain view on Roma identity in order to mobilise protest against unequal treatment or to buttress their demands on the government for protection of their own culture. They can be described as more or less bounded sets of arguments that represent a certain perspective on the position of the Roma and the meaning of Roma-based political action.

A non-territorial European nation

A first frame which was encountered in activists’ accounts describes the Roma as a non-territorial European nation. The Roma activists who applied this perspective to talk about their collective identity emphasised that the Roma all over Europe posses a common history and, especially, a common origin. They argued that all Roma communities are somehow connected, not through territory but through blood ties. The apparent fragmentation in terms of language or culture is in their view related to time periods of aggressive assimilation and repressive policies implemented by non-Roma authorities. The argument is very much in keeping with the ideas formulated by Roma linguist and representative of the International Roma Union (IRU) Ian Hancock:

I have been among the most vocal in insisting that Roma are a people who originated in Asia. I take the position of the sociolinguist, who sees language as the vehicle of culture. And we indeed speak a language and maintain a culture whose core of direct retention is directly traceable to India. The acknowledgement of that position is essential, because the alternative is to create a fictitious history and to have, again, our identity in the hands of non-Romani policy-makers and scholars. (Hancock 1997)

Roma activists in the Czech and Slovak Republic who advocated this view also firmly contended that the position of the Roma should be perceived not simply as that of an Indian diaspora, but as that of a nation that is deeply rooted in Europe. The problems facing the Roma were in this perspective attributed mainly to a lack of serious Roma representation in public bodies on domestic and international levels. In other words, they lobby for special forms of Roma representation. This frame is dissimilar from many other national liberation movements because it explicitly excludes territorial ‘liberation’ as a goal. In a radical version of this argument, Hancock explains that support for their claims can be found in the existence of a symbolic external homeland:

The arguments for stressing the “Indian connection” seem clear. In these times, when Europe is divided into nation-states, being identified with an actual homeland brings legitimacy and a measure of security. Furthermore, it is the Indian factors-linguistic, genetic, and cultural-that different Romani populations share; it is the more recently acquired non-Indian factors that divide us. If I want to speak in Romani to a speaker of a dialect different from my own, it is the European words we must each avoid, not the Indian ones. (Hancock 1997)

The Roma activists who relied on argumentation within this frame emphasised the importance of transnational networks as mobilising structures. Not unsurprisingly, the Roma activists who use this frame usually maintained connections to the International Roma Union (IRU) or the Roma National Congress (RNC).7 It is also comes as no surprise that this frame represents a useful bridge between activists in the domestic arena and the international political environment. Direct lobbying toward international organisations like the Council of Europe and the OSCE has proven its worth: both organisations have established special institutions to raise the level of awareness concerning the problems facing the Roma within the respective member states. Indirectly this strategy has contributed to higher levels of external pressure and scrutiny on both the Czech and Slovak Republic. For this reason Roma activists have formulated their criticism often in a language referring to international moral standards like human rights. One could perhaps argue that this strategy to some extent reflects the experience of what Soysal (1996) has called ‘postnational citizenship’, a practice of citizenship that is increasingly defined according to entitlements emerging from the transnational discourse and the practice of international human rights protection. Arguably, the growing attention during the last decade of human rights organisations for the position of the Roma in both countries has stimulated the development of this strategy. Dimitrina Petrova, director of one of the most articulate human rights organisations focusing on Roma, the European Roma Rights Center (ERRC), wrote recently in one of the organisations newsletters:

(...) for the Roma of Europe, Human Rights seems to be a uniting principle, a universally acknowledged tool for positive change. Contrary to this, in our day-to-day work, we are often confronted by Roma who are not happy about ERRC having chosen to work with certain other Roma, on the vague but bitter grounds that they are not legitimate as Roma. I personally believe that the Roma struggle is often weakened by the abysmal question, ‘Who is real Rom?’ The struggle over identity at this stage does not unite the Roma in Europe. (Petrova 1999) 

This immediately demonstrates that the frame ‘Roma as a non-territorial European nation’ brings a number of problems with it and was consequently criticised by many of the interviewed activists. The essence of their criticism was that Indian origin and transborder co-operation are very academic notions and thus poor tools for effective mobilisation in both the Czech and Slovak context. The frame was in many cases seen as purely symbolic. As one Czech Roma activist stated: 

We are a national minority. If you want to call it a nation… okay… but that doesn’t change much. The fact that the Roma are a world-wide and a European nation is only important to stress towards other countries where the Roma are not yet acknowledged as a national minority

Furthermore, the idea of being a ‘transborder nation’ only seems to become concrete when activists have the opportunity to take part in international Roma conferences. International organisations, however, have become increasingly interested in these meetings. Thus they appear regularly, attract more participants and have opened up new opportunities for finding financial support. 

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