TY - JOUR
T1 - Researching the health and social inequalities experienced by European Roma populations
T2 - Complicity, oppression and resistance
AU - Orton, Lois
AU - Fuseini, Olga
AU - Kóczé, Angéla
AU - Rövid, Márton
AU - Salway, Sarah
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - This paper draws on the experience of two Romani and three non-Romani scholars in knowledge production on the health and social inequalities experienced by European Roma populations. Together, we explore how we might better account for, and work against, the complex web of dynamic oppressions embedded within processes of academic knowledge production. Our aim is to encourage careful scrutiny through which sociologists of health and illness might better recognise our own complicity with oppression and identify concrete actions towards transforming our research practices. Drawing on a well-known domains of racism typology (Annual Review of Public Health, 40, 2019, 105), we use examples from our own work to illustrate three interconnected domains of oppression in which we have found ourselves entangled (structural, cultural and interpersonal). A new conceptual framework is proposed as an aid to understanding the spectrum of different “types” of complicity (voluntary–involuntary, conscious–unconscious) that one might reproduce across all three domains. We conclude by exploring how sociologists of health and illness might promote a more actively anti-racist research agenda, identifying and challenging subtle, hidden and embedded negative ideologies and practices as well as more obviously oppressive ones. We hope these reflections will help revitalise important conversations.
AB - This paper draws on the experience of two Romani and three non-Romani scholars in knowledge production on the health and social inequalities experienced by European Roma populations. Together, we explore how we might better account for, and work against, the complex web of dynamic oppressions embedded within processes of academic knowledge production. Our aim is to encourage careful scrutiny through which sociologists of health and illness might better recognise our own complicity with oppression and identify concrete actions towards transforming our research practices. Drawing on a well-known domains of racism typology (Annual Review of Public Health, 40, 2019, 105), we use examples from our own work to illustrate three interconnected domains of oppression in which we have found ourselves entangled (structural, cultural and interpersonal). A new conceptual framework is proposed as an aid to understanding the spectrum of different “types” of complicity (voluntary–involuntary, conscious–unconscious) that one might reproduce across all three domains. We conclude by exploring how sociologists of health and illness might promote a more actively anti-racist research agenda, identifying and challenging subtle, hidden and embedded negative ideologies and practices as well as more obviously oppressive ones. We hope these reflections will help revitalise important conversations.
KW - Roma
KW - anti-racism
KW - complicity
KW - health inequalities
KW - oppression
KW - research practice
KW - sociology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85121358988&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1467-9566.13411
DO - 10.1111/1467-9566.13411
M3 - Article
C2 - 34919271
AN - SCOPUS:85121358988
SN - 0141-9889
VL - 44
SP - 73
EP - 89
JO - Sociology of Health and Illness
JF - Sociology of Health and Illness
IS - S1
ER -