Gypsy Law: Romani Legal Traditions and CultureWalter O. Weyrauch Approximately one thousand years ago Gypsies, or Roma, left their native India. Today Gypsies can be found in countries throughout the world, their distinct culture still intact in spite of the intense persecution they have endured. This authoritative collection brings together leading Gypsy and non-Gypsy scholars to examine the Romani legal system, an autonomous body of law based on an oral tradition and existing alongside dominant national legal networks. For centuries the Roma have survived by using defensive strategies, especially the absolute exclusion of gadje (non-Gypsies) from their private lives, their values, and information about Romani language and social institutions. Sexuality, gender, and the body are fundamental to Gypsy law, with rules that govern being pure (vujo) or impure (marime). Women play an important role in maintaining legal customs, having the power to sanction and to contaminate, but they are not directly involved in legal proceedings. These essays offer a comparative perspective on Romani legal procedures and identity, including topics such as the United States' criminalization of many aspects of Gypsy law, parallels between Jewish and Gypsy law, and legal distinctions between Romani communities. The contributors raise broad theoretical questions that transcend the specific Gypsy context and offer important insights into understanding oral legal traditions. Together they suggest a theoretical framework for explaining the coexistence of formal and informal law within a single legal system. They also highlight the ethical dilemmas encountered in comparative law research and definitions of "human rights." |
Contents
An Introduction to Gypsy | 1 |
Thomas Acton Susan Caffrey and Gary Mundy | 88 |
The Formation of Law within Gypsy Communities | 101 |
Calum Carmichael | 117 |
Juridical Autonomy among Fifteenth and Sixteenth Century Gypsies | 137 |
to Rom Traditional | 149 |
Ian Hancock | 170 |
The RomVlach Gypsies and the KrisRomani | 188 |
CONTRIBUTORS | 277 |
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Common terms and phrases
Acton American Angloromani authority behavior blood feuding Canada Churari clan CLÉBERT concept conflict courts crime criminal customs Defilement discussing divano essay ethnic example female Finnish Roma fortune-telling gaje gajikane Grönfors GROPPER Gypsy communities Gypsy groups Gypsy law Gypsy women hereinafter host society Ian Hancock individual informal issue Jan Yoors Jeatran Jewish judge justice Kaale Kalderash kin group kris kumpaniya language lawyers legal culture legal system living Machvaya male marime marriage married MCLAUGHLIN means menstruation Mishnah non-Gypsy norms note 58 note 62 offense oral legal traditions origin person police pollution practice private law private lawmaking problems punishment refer Reisman ritual role Rom-Vlach Romani culture Romani language Romanichals Romaniya rules sanctions sexual shame shato Sinti social control strategy supra note 29 SUTHERLAND taboos term tion trial United unwritten violations vitsa Vlach Vlax Weyrauch & Bell Weyrauch and Bell woman word Yoors