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Author = Joyce, Ann Marie;
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Print media framings of those blonde Roma children
(2016)
Marron, Aileen; Joyce, Ann Marie; Carr, James; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael; Power, M...
Print media framings of those blonde Roma children
(2016)
Marron, Aileen; Joyce, Ann Marie; Carr, James; Devereux, Eoin; Breen, Michael; Power, Martin J.; Haynes, Amanda
Abstract:
On October 16th 2013 Police carried out a raid on a Roma camp in Farsala in Central Greece. They rescued ‘Maria’, a four year old child who was presumed to be the victim of child abduction (Okely 2014). Blonde, with fair skin and green-blue eyes, it was believed that she could not be related to the Roma gypsies claiming to be her family. DNA tests revealed the child was not a blood relative of her Roma parents, who were arrested on suspicion of child abduction. The child was subsequently removed from the camp and placed in the care of a local charity. Greek Police appealed to the international community to help identify Maria. Old myths of child abduction were quickly resurrected within media discourse. Children, it was said, were bought and sold for begging or for claiming social welfare payments. Media commentators asked how many other children might be hidden in such camps, and references were made to high profile missing children such as Madeleine McCann and Ben Needham (Richard...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8842
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Return migration from England to Ireland: the impact of accent on feelings of belonging
(2010)
Joyce, Ann Marie
Return migration from England to Ireland: the impact of accent on feelings of belonging
(2010)
Joyce, Ann Marie
Abstract:
The advent of the ‘Celtic Tiger’ saw Ireland transform from a country with high levels of emigration to one of significant immigration. Many of those who migrated to Ireland in the past years are ‘returned migrants’; people who left Ireland, often to work in the UK, and have now returned ‘home’. In many cases they have brought their foreign-born children ‘home’ with them, and these ‘children’ are the focus of this study. This paper examines the impact that accent may have on feelings of belonging of the children of returned migrants from England to Ireland. The qualitative approach in this research is based on interviews with five participants; all of whom moved to Ireland, from England, at the age of ten years or older and are now adults. The research explores the ways in which accent has worked to either help them belong, or mark them as ‘outsiders’; and the findings and conclusions are drawn using a range of theoretical frameworks, such as theories around ethnicity, migration, di...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/7967
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2016 (1)
2010 (1)
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