Sanitation Infrastructure at the Systemic Edge: Segregated Roma Settlements and Multiple Health Risks in Slovakia.

Richard Filčák, Daniel Škobla
Author Information
  1. Richard Filčák: Center of Social and Psychological Sciences, The Institute for Forecasting, Slovak Academy of Sciences, 811 05 Bratislava, Slovakia.
  2. Daniel Škobla: Institute of Ethnology and Social Anthropology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, 813 64 Bratislava, Slovakia.

Abstract

This article explores how multiple health risks in municipalities with Roma settlements in Slovakia are related to the varieties of local governance and the authorities' conduct towards the local Roma population. The first part of the paper describes the situation in Roma settlements from the perspective of unequal access to sewerage and water pipelines. Introduced here are data on identified contagious diseases that correlated multiple health risks with the lack of sanitation and/or water infrastructure. The second section of the paper put forth typologies of government approaches towards the Roma, which based on ethnographic fieldwork, allows us to identify factors of attitudinal, structural and policy-oriented nature. Research results point to a "triad" of key circumstances: these are the structural conditions in municipalities and the history of local inter-ethnic relations and attitude of authorities towards Roma. Finally, possible solutions and approaches regarding how to mitigate the multiple health risks are discussed. It is suggested that on the one hand, in many villages there is a profound institutional discrimination of Roma with respect to water and sanitation infrastructure; on the other hand, water services are increasingly becoming an expensive commodity that not everyone can afford. The article concludes with discussion on enabling conditions and ways to ensure access to basic infrastructure in rural Roma communities. The solution is not only a compliance with principles of non-discrimination and existing technical norms and standards but also in securing the accessible funding for construction of the sanitation infrastructure in a smart way, including innovations and operation of cheaper and environmentally responsible sanitation technologies.

Keywords

References

  1. Front Public Health. 2017 Aug 21;5:213 [PMID: 28871278]
  2. Health Hum Rights. 2017 Dec;19(2):61-72 [PMID: 29302163]
  3. Soc Sci Med. 2001 Nov;53(9):1191-204 [PMID: 11556609]
  4. Sci Total Environ. 2019 Sep 15;683:537-546 [PMID: 31146059]
  5. Int J Public Health. 2018 Dec;63(9):1123-1131 [PMID: 29909522]
  6. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2013 Nov;216(6):662-71 [PMID: 23333082]
  7. Cent Eur J Public Health. 2017 Dec;25 Suppl 2:S44-S50 [PMID: 29524369]
  8. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018 Feb 27;15(3): [PMID: 29495474]
  9. Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci. 2014;18(8):1218-23 [PMID: 24817298]
  10. F1000Res. 2017 Sep 15;6:1692 [PMID: 30774929]
  11. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2016 Mar 17;13(3): [PMID: 26999180]

MeSH Term

Humans
Roma
Rural Population
Sanitation
Slovakia
Social Segregation

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0RomasanitationinfrastructuremultiplehealthriskslocalwatersettlementsSlovakiatowardsarticlemunicipalitiespaperaccessgovernmentapproachesstructuralconditionshandexploresrelatedvarietiesgovernanceauthorities'conductpopulationfirstpartdescribessituationperspectiveunequalseweragepipelinesIntroduceddataidentifiedcontagiousdiseasescorrelatedlackand/orsecondsectionputforthtypologiesbasedethnographicfieldworkallowsusidentifyfactorsattitudinalpolicy-orientednatureResearchresultspoint"triad"keycircumstances:historyinter-ethnicrelationsattitudeauthoritiesFinallypossiblesolutionsregardingmitigatediscussedsuggestedonemanyvillagesprofoundinstitutionaldiscriminationrespectservicesincreasinglybecomingexpensivecommodityeveryonecanaffordconcludesdiscussionenablingwaysensurebasicruralcommunitiessolutioncomplianceprinciplesnon-discriminationexistingtechnicalnormsstandardsalsosecuringaccessiblefundingconstructionsmartwayincludinginnovationsoperationcheaperenvironmentallyresponsibletechnologiesSanitationInfrastructureSystemicEdge:SegregatedSettlementsMultipleHealthRiskssegregated

Similar Articles

Cited By