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Journal Article: BibTeX citation key:  Zorn2004
Zorn, J. 2004. The Politics of Exclusion : Citizenship, Human Rights and the Erased in Slovenia. Revija za Sociologiju 1 (2):
Added by: eucitac 2009-09-15 10:07:17
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Categories: Citizenship
Keywords: acquisition/loss of nationality, human rights, residence, Slovenia
Creators: Zorn
Collection: Revija za Sociologiju

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Abstract
After the succession of Slovenia from former Yugoslavia majority of residents of non-Slovenian origin (from other republics of former Yugoslavia) gained Slovenian citizenship. Those who did not gain citizenship were secretly erased from the Register of permanent residents. The erased were deprived of all the rights that arise from the status of permanent residents: they were stripped of all social and economic rights including the right to live in Slovenia, although they had been living in Slovenia for decades with their families; they had their homes, social networks, employments, etc. According to the Law on Foreigners, which suddenly was applied on them, they became "aliens staying illegally in Slovenia". By staying illegally in Slovenia they felt under the police jurisdiction. They had to legalise their staying from the very beginning; for many these procedures turned into bureaucratic torture. As a result of the erasure RPR some of them suffered expulsion form Slovenia - they were expelled from their own homes and by force divided from their family members. In 1999 and in 2003 the "erasure" was recognised by Constitutional court as an anti-constitutional act, but nevertheless discrimination continued. It has been only since 2002 that the erased have gained their political subjectivation and have started publicly fight for their rights. For ten years (since 1992 to 2002) silence and cultural anaesthesia have prevailed over their experiences. The erased established their own non-governmental organisation and start fighting politically for their rights only 10 years after the erasure. Only in 2002 the came out publicly and collectively as victims of exclusionary governmental practices and bureaucratic opression. The author analyses three cases and shows that there is a high co-relation between human rights and citizenship (rights), that human rights are overlapping citizenship rights and that there has been hardly any human right that has not been violated when one lacks (residential) citizenship.
Added by: eucitac

 
Further information may be found at:
http://www.hsd.hr/revija/pdf/1-2-2004/05-Zorn.pdf

 
Language
English
Added by: eucitac

 
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