“Where can we put our homes?” Gypsies and Travelers in the English Green Belt. Kabachnik, P. Journal of Cultural Geography, 31(3):280–303, 2014.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
© 2014, JCG Press, Oklahoma State University. For the past few centuries, anti-nomadic legislation has attempted to settle nomads who traveled throughout England and elsewhere in Europe, as their mobilities challenged the sedentarist goals of modern nation states. As recently as 1994, the nomadic way of life was effectively criminalized in England and Wales, revealing the unbalanced power relations between Gypsies and Travelers and the state. This article will examine and highlight the agency and spatialities of resistance of nomadic Gypsy and Traveler groups in England who are struggling for the recognition of their right to legally inhabit caravan sites in areas such as Green Belt land. The selection of places in the Green Belt for their homes offers another contested landscape that runs counter to the typical understanding of Gypsies and Travelers residing in marginalized places due to discrimination or wanting to remain unnoticed. By drawing from Gypsies and Travelers' own narratives, this article documents how they navigate through policies designed to constrain them.
@article{kabachnik_where_2014,
	title = {“{Where} can we put our homes?” {Gypsies} and {Travelers} in the {English} {Green} {Belt}},
	volume = {31},
	doi = {10.1080/08873631.2014.941140},
	abstract = {© 2014, JCG Press, Oklahoma State University. For the past few centuries, anti-nomadic legislation has attempted to settle nomads who traveled throughout England and elsewhere in Europe, as their mobilities challenged the sedentarist goals of modern nation states. As recently as 1994, the nomadic way of life was effectively criminalized in England and Wales, revealing the unbalanced power relations between Gypsies and Travelers and the state. This article will examine and highlight the agency and spatialities of resistance of nomadic Gypsy and Traveler groups in England who are struggling for the recognition of their right to legally inhabit caravan sites in areas such as Green Belt land. The selection of places in the Green Belt for their homes offers another contested landscape that runs counter to the typical understanding of Gypsies and Travelers residing in marginalized places due to discrimination or wanting to remain unnoticed. By drawing from Gypsies and Travelers' own narratives, this article documents how they navigate through policies designed to constrain them.},
	number = {3},
	journal = {Journal of Cultural Geography},
	author = {Kabachnik, P.},
	year = {2014},
	pages = {280--303},
}

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