The recent enlargement of the European Union
has facilitated mobility across borders for citizens from the two youngest
member states, Romania and Bulgaria since 2007. For individuals belonging to
Europe’s largest minority, the Roma, migrating to other EU countries such as
France and Germany might offer chances but may also result in new, multiple
forms of exclusion. While some cities have developed specific measures to give
assistance to Roma migrants, these are often also affected by exclusionary
practices that restrain securing livelihoods or that may lead to new,
involuntary mobilities. As scholars of Roma exclusion such as Legros and Vitale
(2011) have stated, the presence of Roma and their high visibility in urban
spaces has figured in local conflicts and rejection combining Anti-Gypsy and
security arguments in public debates. But cities’ political practices towards
Roma may also reflect national migration management aims and calls for
controlling migratory fluxes of specific, unwanted groups of EU free-movers. While
the European Union is now a community where free-movers usually remain
politically unnoticed, it can be discussed in how far Roma seem to be excluded
from this principle, enjoying a form of “second-class” EU membership. The situation of Roma migrants on the local
level is therefore not only a question of urban inclusion and exclusion, but is
also entangled with questions of citizenship and belonging in the enlarged EU.
The presented research project aims at understanding
the multiple ways in which Roma migrants from Eastern Europe are affected in
their daily lives in French and German cities by such policies and political
practices that originate on different scales (supra-national, national and on
the urban level). The paper offers preliminary findings from field research and
discusses the conceptual outline.