On 1 January 2014 the transitional controls on free movement adopted by the UK when Bulgaria and Romania joined the EU in 2007, ended. This paper demonstrates how the discourses of politicians relating to their removal, amplified via news media contributed to the extension of state bordering practices further into everyday life. Based on ethnographic research into everyday bordering during 2013-2015 the paper uses an intersectional framework to explore how this homogenizing, bordering discourse was experienced and contested from differently situated perspectives of Roma and non--Roma social actors from established communities
The Roma (Gypsies) are a semi-nomadic people of Indian origins and are Europe’s largest minority gro...
The article can be included in the contemporary debate about the role that transnational migrations ...
The research seeks to understand the impact of the end of the transitional period following the UK’s...
On 1 January 2014 the transitional controls on free movement adopted by the UK when Bulgaria and Rom...
This article explores the intersections of borderwork and boundary work in everyday encounters in th...
This article reports on a qualitative study with migrant Roma communities in South Yorkshire, UK. Th...
This article analyses the political and media discourses on Roma in Hungary, Finland and the UK, in ...
This article analyses the political and media discourses on Roma in Hungary, Finland and the UK, in ...
This paper critically examines the processes of categorisation of Roma migrants in Glasgow, contribu...
In new research, Dora-Olivia Vicol and William Allen examine how the media reported on Bulgarians an...
Contemporary political action for ethnic and national minorities in Europe appears to be increasingl...
This ethnographic study explores how 'Romanian Roma' migrants in the UK, without previous relationsh...
This paper critically examines the processes of categorisation of Roma migrants in Glasgow, contribu...
With the entry of several Eastern European nations into the European Union (EU), a “third” space has...
This report discusses some of the current drivers and challenges of Roma migration to the UK. Roma m...
The Roma (Gypsies) are a semi-nomadic people of Indian origins and are Europe’s largest minority gro...
The article can be included in the contemporary debate about the role that transnational migrations ...
The research seeks to understand the impact of the end of the transitional period following the UK’s...
On 1 January 2014 the transitional controls on free movement adopted by the UK when Bulgaria and Rom...
This article explores the intersections of borderwork and boundary work in everyday encounters in th...
This article reports on a qualitative study with migrant Roma communities in South Yorkshire, UK. Th...
This article analyses the political and media discourses on Roma in Hungary, Finland and the UK, in ...
This article analyses the political and media discourses on Roma in Hungary, Finland and the UK, in ...
This paper critically examines the processes of categorisation of Roma migrants in Glasgow, contribu...
In new research, Dora-Olivia Vicol and William Allen examine how the media reported on Bulgarians an...
Contemporary political action for ethnic and national minorities in Europe appears to be increasingl...
This ethnographic study explores how 'Romanian Roma' migrants in the UK, without previous relationsh...
This paper critically examines the processes of categorisation of Roma migrants in Glasgow, contribu...
With the entry of several Eastern European nations into the European Union (EU), a “third” space has...
This report discusses some of the current drivers and challenges of Roma migration to the UK. Roma m...
The Roma (Gypsies) are a semi-nomadic people of Indian origins and are Europe’s largest minority gro...
The article can be included in the contemporary debate about the role that transnational migrations ...
The research seeks to understand the impact of the end of the transitional period following the UK’s...