The last acceptable prejudice in Europe? Anti-Gypsyism as the obstacle to Roma inclusion

Author:

Kende Anna1ORCID,Hadarics Márton1,Bigazzi Sára2,Boza Mihaela3,Kunst Jonas R.4,Lantos Nóra Anna1,Lášticová Barbara5,Minescu Anca6,Pivetti Monica7,Urbiola Ana8

Affiliation:

1. ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary

2. University of Pécs, Hungary

3. Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iaşi, Romania

4. University of Oslo, Norway

5. Slovak Academy of Sciences, Slovakia

6. University of Limerick, Ireland

7. University of Chieti-Pescara, Italy

8. University of Jaen, Spain

Abstract

National and European policies aim to facilitate the integration of Roma people into mainstream society. Yet, Europe’s largest ethnic group continues to be severely discriminated. Although prejudice has been identified to be at the core of this failure, social psychological research on anti-Gypsyism remains scarce. We conducted a study in six countries using student and community samples ( N = 2,089; Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, Norway, Italy, Spain) to understand how anti-Gypsyism among majority-group members predicts unfavorable acculturation preferences toward Roma people. Openly negative stereotypes predicted acculturation preferences strongly across the countries. However, stereotypes about the Roma receiving undeserved benefits were also relevant to some degree in East-Central Europe, implying that intergroup relations are framed there as realistic conflict. Stereotypes about traditional Roma culture did not play a central role in acculturation preferences. Our findings highlighted that anti-Gypsyism may be an impediment to integration efforts, and efforts should be context-specific rather than pan-national.

Funder

National Research and Innovation Fund, Project

Justice Programme of the European Union

New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology

János Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Vedecká Grantová AgentÚra MŠVVaŠ SR a SAV

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

Reference18 articles.

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