‘We're still here’: Misrecognition and the quest for dual identification of Roma people

Misrecognition describes everyday practices that deny the autonomy of minority members to define who they are and instead impose identities that may diverge from their own sense of self. Being misrecognized is particularly relevant for the historically marginalized Roma people, whose national belong...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of community & applied social psychology 2024-05, Vol.34 (3), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Kende, Anna, Sam Nariman, Hadi, Ayanian, Arin H., Halabi, Slieman, Ivan, Claudiu, Karić, Tijana, Mihić, Vladimir, Nyúl, Boglárka, Pántya, József, Silva, Caroline, Hopkins, Nick
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container_issue 3
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container_title Journal of community & applied social psychology
container_volume 34
creator Kende, Anna
Sam Nariman, Hadi
Ayanian, Arin H.
Halabi, Slieman
Ivan, Claudiu
Karić, Tijana
Mihić, Vladimir
Nyúl, Boglárka
Pántya, József
Silva, Caroline
Hopkins, Nick
description Misrecognition describes everyday practices that deny the autonomy of minority members to define who they are and instead impose identities that may diverge from their own sense of self. Being misrecognized is particularly relevant for the historically marginalized Roma people, whose national belonging is repeatedly questioned despite centuries of co‐existence and citizenship. Our aim was to understand whether the experience of misrecognition, along with discrimination, would predict identification patterns that represent an obstacle to dual identification among Roma people in three East‐Central European countries: Hungary, Romania and Serbia. We collected data among Roma participants online and face‐to‐face with convenience sampling (N = 1,325). Latent class analysis revealed three similar classes based on national and ethnic identification scores in all subsamples: (1) disidentification, (2) Roma identification and (3) dual identification. Logistic regression analysis showed that misrecognition and discrimination predicted stronger Roma identity than dual identification in Hungary and Serbia. However, misrecognition predicted stronger dual identification in Romania, possibly as a reaffirmation strategy in response to misrecognition. Our results show that misrecognition can add to our understanding of minority group members' identification with the superordinate category of the nation as well as subgroup ethnic minority identity, and this connection could be key for advancing Roma inclusion.
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subjects discrimination
dual identity
Humanities and Social Sciences
latent class analysis
misrecognition
Psychology
Roma minority
title ‘We're still here’: Misrecognition and the quest for dual identification of Roma people
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