Migration and Changing Expectations in a Roma Segregated Neighborhood - Remus Gabriel Anghel

The segregation and poverty of the Roma have been debated for the last thirty years in Romania and some other Eastern European countries. Academic research was conducted to better understand the conditions of Roma discrimination, poverty, and segregation, while applied programs were designed and implemented to improve their standing in the society. Despite the existing debates, applied projects, and governmental programs, the overall situation of the people living in segregated Roma “ghettos” has largely remained unchanged, with people living in poor conditions, being often illiterate, discriminated against, and unemployed. Many of these people, however, got tired of waiting for the support promised by the Romanian state and looked for a better life abroad. In my ethnographic journey into the world of a poor Roma neighborhood, I look at the dimensions of this societal failure—the poverty and discrimination these people experience, but also how migration is becoming the main mechanism for the emancipation of this deprived population forgotten by the institutions of the Romanian state that should have helped them.Read by actor Daniel Popa , with an illustration by Alex Săvescuhttps://theanthro.art/migration-and-changing-expectations-in-a-roma-segregated-neighborhood-remus-gabriel-anghel/

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AnthroArt – Action for People and Planet is an initiative of three applied anthropology organisations – Antropedia, Namla and Ambigrama – that aims to create an international platform for connecting anthropology and art, with the purpose of deepening awareness about inequality and our relation with the environment and driving change across three geographies: Romania, The Netherlands and Portugal, as well as beyond.AnthroArt – Action for People and Planet is a two-year project (2023-2024) co-funded by the European Commision, under the Creative Europe Programme (CREA).***Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.