The Network Expression of a Roma Diaspora
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Ogáyar Marín, Francisco Javier; Muntean, Vasile; Gamella Mora, Juan Francisco; Kovářík, Jaromír; Espín Martín, Antonio ManuelEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Cultural traits Gender roles Migration Roma Social media
Date
2025-05Referencia bibliográfica
Ogáyar, F. J., Muntean, V., Gamella, J. F., Kovářík, J., & Espín, A. M. (2025). The network expression of a Roma diaspora. Global Networks, 25(3), e70013. https://doi.org/10.1111/glob.70013
Sponsorship
European Union's Horizon 2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie 754446; 7th Framework Programme (GA319901); Andalusia Government (EMERGIA EMC21_00331, C.SEJ.371.UGR23); Spanish Government (FPU17/01349); Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (PID2023-147817NB-I00, ID2019-106146GB-I00); Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competividad; Basque Government (IT1461-22); Grant Agency of the Czech Republic (21-22796S); Universidad de Granada / CBUAAbstract
Despite the longstanding debates among ethnographers and policymakers regarding the social organization of the Roma–the
largest and most marginalized native ethnocultural minority in Europe–quantitative analyses are limited. This is partly due to a
unique combination of social closure and spatial dispersion of most Roma groups, exacerbated by their recent massive migration
from Central and Eastern Europe. Here, we implement a novel methodology that draws on Roma’s migration networks and
ethnicity- and kin-centred social norms, which enforce a permanent contact with their close ones, often facilitated by online
social media like Facebook. We combine snowball sampling and a questionnaire about four ‘top friends’, as ranked by the Facebook
algorithm, to elicit a sociocentric network of a comparatively large group of self-identified Roma originating in a Romanian area
(n = 752, 96% living outside Romania). Our analysis indicates that the elicited network displays a notable similarity to the social
structure of the target population in terms of kinship, subethnic group affiliation, gender roles and other characteristics. The
detected patterns provide a quantitative evaluation of the qualitative ethnographic research on the Roma, thereby opening new
avenues for research on this and other hard-to-reach populations.