The ‘camps system’ in Italy : corruption, inefficiencies and practices of resistance


Autoria(s): Armillei, Riccardo
Data(s)

27/04/2015

Resumo

The alarming proliferation of ‘campi nomadi’ (nomad camps) in Italy intensifies the urgency of analysing their internal mechanism and the complex relation between all the parties [1]; ‘camp dwellers’, government agencies and Civil Society organisations [CSOs][2], involved in their production and reification. To arrive at an adequate appreciation of this nexus, the three components of what has been termed the ‘camps system’ have been analysed separately. This approach helped to pinpoint how they have combined to produce a hegemonic perspective on Romani issues, which yields a simplistic binary interpretation of a complex and dynamic phenomenon: Romanies are generally viewed as either victims or threats, narrowing the range of responses to charity or hostility. Only in recent years a growing awareness regarding the agency of camp inhabitants has re-emerged more consistently after a period in which an ‘encamped life’ was at times associated to Agamben’s (1998) ‘bare life’ and Foucault’s (1977) ‘biopolitics’. Nevertheless, scholars are still hesitant in developing a current of study looking specifically at camps, not only as ‘resistance sites’, but more broadly as ‘all-inclusive systems’, where interacting and interdependent agents form an integrated whole. Through in-depth analysis of this specific socio-political context I was able to observe the existence of a democratic deficit in the way these actors operate and co-operate with each other: competition and antagonisms, corruption, lack of transparency and accountability, and inefficiencies have all contributed over the years to producing and maintaining the present living situation of the Romani peoples.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30086611

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Council of Europe

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30086611/armillei-campssysteminitaly-2015.pdf

http://romanistudies.eu/the-camps-system-in-italy/

Direitos

2015, Council of Europe

Palavras-Chave #Romani/'Gypsy' people #Italy #'camps system'
Tipo

Media Article