Roma and Racism: International Responses to a Civil Rights Struggle In
Europe
Location: George Washington University, Linder Family Commons, 1957 E
Street, NW, Washington, DC
Event Date: May 3, 2012
Event Time: 9:30 a.m.
– 11:30 a.m.
Contact: Adna Karamehic-Oates
1-202-721-5600
The
economic crisis in Europe has given rise to an increase of nationalism and
intolerance in many countries, including xenophobic violence against refugees,
asylum seekers, migrants and others seen as outsiders. The Roma - Europe’s
largest ethnic minority - have been particularly affected.
Perceived by society
as second-class citizens, Roma face disproportionate rates of harassment as well
as institutional discrimination in education, health, housing, and employment,
which directly affect their high rates of unemployment and poverty.
Roma
are easy targets for a range of societal ills, as illustrated by the recent
controversy surrounding the cover story in a Swiss magazine entitled “The Roma
Are Coming.” The magazine’s misuse of a three-year-old photo of a Roma boy
holding a toy gun generated a storm online.
While the efforts of European
governments and multilateral institutions like the World Bank and the European
Union have provided some impetus for change, only a fraction of Roma have
benefited. Quality of life for most, measured by any economic indicator, has
actually deteriorated.
Why have international efforts so far failed to
improve the lives of Roma across the continent? What national and international
mechanisms are most successful in promoting the human rights of Roma? What does
the crisis of the European Union mean for the socially excluded? Where can the
U.S. play an important role?
Speakers
a.. Erika Schlager, Counsel for
International Law, US Helsinki Commission
b.. Susan Ball, OSCE Coordinator,
Deputy Director Office of European Political and Security Affairs, Department of
State (TBC)
c.. Zeljko Jovanovic, Director of Roma Initiatives, Open Society
Foundations
d.. Moderator: Joelle Fiss, Senior Associate, Fighting
Discrimination Program, Human Rights First
This event is cosponsored by Human
Rights First, the National Democratic Institute, the National Endowment for
Democracy, and the Open Society Foundations.
The cosponsors thank George
Washington University’s Institute for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies for
hosting and chairing this event.
Link: http://www.humanrig htsfirst. org/2012/ 04/26/roma-
and-racism- international- responses- to-a-civil- rights-struggle-
in-europe/
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Erica Schlager has been a consistent ally of the Romani people.
Morgan
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