Those Who Count. Expert Practices of Roma Classification
Those Who Count. Expert Practices of Roma Classification
Author(s): Mihai Surdu
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, History, Social Sciences, Cultural history, Political Theory, Sociology, Social history, Politics and society, Ethnic Minorities Studies
Published by: Central European University Press
Keywords: Romanies; Government policies; Roma Classification; Ethnicity; Stereotypes; Public opinion;
Summary/Abstract: Those Who Count scrutinizes the scientific and expert practices of Roma classification and counting, and the politics of Roma-related knowledge production. The book takes a historical perspective on Roma group construction, both as an epistemic object and a policy target, with a focus on the expert discourse of the last two decades. The book argues that knowledge production on Roma is neither objective nor disinterested but rather is co-produced by political and academic actors driven by organizational interests with rather narrow disciplinary research traditions, as well as by political manifestos. The result of such co-production is a negative Roma public image circulating well beyond the expert discourse which reinforces stereotypes held by society at large. The case studies and examples presented in the book show that the state-led population census, policy related surveys, as well as academic and scientific research, together craft an essentialized Roma identity. The recently reemerged Roma-related genetic research imports assumptions, classifications, and narrations from the social sciences and contributes through sampling strategies, interpretation of data, and generalization to reify and pathologize Roma ethnicity. Roma are relegated by experts to several types of determinism: to a social category, to a frozen culture, and to a homogenous biologized entity.
- E-ISBN-13: 978-963-386-115-8
- Print-ISBN-13: 978-963-386-114-1
- Page Count: 292
- Publication Year: 2016
- Language: English
- eBook-PDF
- Introduction
- Table of Content