id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_aiw7xhgv7nfipllfckju6ehy6y Zoƫ James Roma inclusion post Brexit: a challenge to existing rhetoric? 2017 15 .pdf application/pdf 6321 465 57 Roma experiences of subjective violence that manifest as hate crime, rather than Gypsies and Travellers in the UK for example are of indigenous, not ethnic-Roma, and Vermeersch, 2012) and it is evident that across Europe Roma communities 2009; Kesetovic, 2009; Szikinger, 2010; Bumbu, 2012; Buckova, 2012). The research and policy focus on Roma experiences of 'hate crime' in itself is evidence shows that discrimination is as harmful to Roma communities as hate Despite the extensive impact of hate crimes on communities, it is the discrimination Roma's social and economic exclusion are that EU policy and practice, including the hate crime agenda, should challenge the subjective violence experienced by Roma as hate crime, and the systemic violence We suggest here that hate crime is a social harm caused by the neoliberal (2015) Hate Crimes Against Gypsies, Travellers and Roma in Europe. (1994) Roma, Gypsies, Travellers. social inclusion of Roma'. ./cache/work_aiw7xhgv7nfipllfckju6ehy6y.pdf ./txt/work_aiw7xhgv7nfipllfckju6ehy6y.txt