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'Emergenza nomadi' : institutional continuities in Italian government policy towards the Romanies

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 15:56 authored by R Armillei
The Romani peoples today occupy a marginalised position in Italian society. A small number of these peoples live in ‘camps’ in conditions of extreme decay and abandonment. In order to address this situation and to improve these peoples’ lives, the Italian government has recently decided to implement an ‘extraordinary intervention.’ In 2008, in continuity with previous centre-left governments, the Berlusconi right-wing coalition implemented the so called ‘Emergenza Nomadi’ (nomad emergency). The state of emergency aimed to solve an issue that had been already categorised in the 1970s as the ‘problema nomadi’ (nomads problem), and was now described and handled as a ‘natural disaster.’ Based on interviews with Romani individuals, institutional and Third Sector representatives, participant observation and a broad range of secondary sources, this article argues that the enactment of an extraordinary measure was both disproportionate to the real degree of threat, and perpetuated an institutional tradition of racism and control of the Romani peoples. It was not, as the declaration of an ‘emergency’ might imply, the result of a sudden, unexpected situation which required an immediate action. The ‘emergency’ and the premises for the implementation of a ‘state of exception’ were created by protracted institutional immobility and political vacuum.

History

Journal

Australian and New Zealand journal of European studies

Volume

6

Pagination

27-41

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1837-2147

eISSN

1836-1803

Language

eng

Publication classification

C2.1 Other contribution to refereed journal, X Not reportable

Copyright notice

2014, Australian and New Zealand Journal of European Studies

Issue

1

Publisher

Contemporary European Studies Association of Australia