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Home-Land: Romanian Roma, Domestic Spaces and the State

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In contemporary society, passport checks at nation-state borders are accepted. But what if these checks were happening in our own home? This book is the first intimate ethnography of these governin...
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  • 26 April 2019
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In contemporary society, passport checks at nation-state borders are accepted. But what if these checks were happening in our own home? This book is the first intimate ethnography of these governing encounters in the home space between Romanian Roma migrants and local frontline workers.

Focusing on how the nation-state is reproduced within the home, the book considers what it is like to have your legal status, your right to ‘belong’, judged from your everyday domestic life. In essence this book is about the divide between state and family, home-land and home and what it means for the new rules of citizenship.

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Price: $127.95
Pages: 256
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Series: Global Migration and Social Change
Publication Date: 26 April 2019
ISBN: 9781529201925
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, Migration, immigration and emigration, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Sociology, Civics and citizenship
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Rachel Humphris is a Lecturer and Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the School of Politics and International Relations at Queen Mary, University of London. She has held visiting fellowships at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, University of California Berkeley and York University Toronto.

Preface;

Introduction: Romanian Roma, motherhood and the home;

Chapter 1: Home truths: fieldwork, writing and anthropology’s ‘home encounter’;

Interlude: Facebook with Cristina;

Chapter 2: Shifting faces of the state: austerity, post-welfare and frontline work;

Interlude: Disappearing Dinni;

Chapter 3: Romanian Roma mothers: labelling and negotiating stigma;

Interlude: Remembering Brussels with Georgeta;

Chapter 4: Intimate bureaucracy and home encounters;

Interlude: Clara’s Belgian torte;

Chapter 5: Gender and intimate state encounters;

Interlude: Losing Sophia and Angela;

Chapter 6: Borders and intimate state encounters;

Conclusion: Homemade state: intimate state encounters at the margins;