Roma in the Population Censuses of 1921 and 1931 on the Territory of Croatia release_go3mzi7sovddzlsngmfomv2pyq

by Danijel Vojak

Published in Migracijske i Etniĉke Teme by Institute for Migration and Ethnic Studies.

2004   Volume 20, p447-476

Abstract

The author's aim in this paper is to analyse the demographic structure of the Roma population on the territory of Croatia, Slavonia and Međimurje in the period between the two world wars. Statistical analytic methods are applied that indicate the age, gender, educational and religious structure of the Roma population in Croatia. The number of Roma on the territory of Croatia in the period between the two world wars was somewhere between 6,000 and 15,000. Most of the Roma were permanently settled and only a small part continued to carry on a nomadic life style. According to the analysed data, the Roma population was concentrated mostly in the area of Eastern Slavonia and in Podravina, whereas Dalmatia, the Croatian littoral, Lika and Krbava had a lower proportion of Roma. The Roma population lived mostly in rural settlements; only a small part lived in urban areas: Zagreb, Karlovac and Varaždin. The author emphasises the equal proportions of males and females in the Roma population, as well as their very young age structure. The majority of the Roma population accepted the dominant religion of the population of the territory in which it settled, and thus most of the Roma declared themselves as members of the Roman Catholic Church, and only a small part as Eastern Orthodox Christians. The author notes that most Roma were illiterate, and that only a small part was totally or partially literate. He emphasises that only a third of the Roma declared themselves as members of the Roma ethnic group, which indicates a low level of mutual connections and the progress of the assimilation process. Based on the population censuses of 1921 and 1931, the author concludes that as a young, illiterate and mutually non-connected group, the Roma population found itself on the margins of Croatian society, and that precisely this marginality was to become a target of the assimilation policies implemented by the regime of the WWII Independent State of Croatia.
In text/plain format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   591.5 kB
file_3ybrqbphqjfnbiwfwdfs7on5b4
hrcak.srce.hr (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Year   2004
Language   en ?
Container Metadata
Open Access Publication
In DOAJ
Not in Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  1333-2546
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: 60519d2f-484e-48f1-a2a2-f5696a78bff7
API URL: JSON