■ Achim, V. 2004. The Roma in Romanian History. Budapest: CEU Press.
■ Banks, M. 1996. Ethnicity: Anthropological Constructions. London: Routledge.
■ Brubaker, R. 2004. Ethnicity without Groups. Harvard University Press
■ Campbell, J.K. 1964. Honour, Family and Patronage. A Study of Institutions and Moral Values in a Greek Mountain Community. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
■ Crowe, D. M. – Kolsti, J. (eds). 1991. The Gypsies of Eastern Europe. M. E. Sharpe, Inc.
■ Friedl, E. 1962. Vasilika. A village in Modern Greece. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.
■ Grillo, R. D. 1998. Pluralism and the Politics of Difference: State, Culture, and Ethnicity in Comparative Perspective. Oxford: University Press.
■ Guibernau, M. - Rex, J. (eds.). 1997. The Ethnicity Reader: Nationalism, Multiculturalism and Migration. Cambridge: Polity Press.
■ Hammel, E. A. 1969. Economic Change, Social Mobility, and Kinship in Serbia, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, Vol. 25, No. 2. (Summer, 1969), 188-197
■ Hann, C. (ed.). 1993. Socialism. Ideals, Ideologies, and Local Practice. London: Routledge.
■ Hann, Ch. 2006. „Not the Horse We Wanted“. Postsocialism, Neoliberalism and Eurasia. Munster: LIT Verlag.
■ Hannerz, U. 2004. Soulside: inquiries into ghetto culture and community. Chicago; London: University of Chicago Press.
■ Kaser, K. 1995. Familie und Verwandschaft auf dem Balkan: Analyse einer Untergehenden Kultur. Wien: Böhlau.
■ Kaminski, I.-M. 1980. The State of Ambiguity. Studies of Gypsy refugees. Gothenburg: University of Gothenburg.
■ Kaneff, D. 2004. Who owns the past? The politics of time in a ´model´ Bulgarian village. Oxford: Berghahn.
■ Kelly, P. (ed.) 2002. Multiculturalism Reconsidered. Cambridge: Polity Press.
■ Kligman, G. 1988. The wedding of the dead: ritual, poetics and popular culture in Transylvania. Berkeley: University of California Press.
■ Lockwood, William G. (ed.). 1967. Essays in Balkan Ethnology (The Kroeber Anthropology Society Papers, Special Publication No. 1, Berkeley, 1967)
■ Marushiakova. 2001. Gypsies in Ottoman Empire. University of Hertfordshire Press.
■ Parekh, B. 2002. Rethinking Multiculturalism: Cultural Diversity and Political Theory. Harvard: Harvard University Press.
■ Pine, F. 1996. “Naming the house and naming the land: Kinship and social groups in Highland Poland”, The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (N.S.) 2: 443-459.
■ Sobotka, E. 2003. Romani Migration in the 1990s: Perspectives on Dynamic, Interpretation and Policy, Romani Studies 5, Vol. 13, No 2 (2003), 79-121.
■ Stewart, M. 1997. The time of the Gypsies. Westview Press.
■ Tcherenkov, L. - Laederich, S. (2004). The Rroma otherwise known as Gypsies, Gitanos, Γύφτοι, Tsiganes, Ţigani, Çingene, Zigeuner, Bohémiens, Travellers, Fahrende, etc. Vol. I. – History, Language, and Groups. Basel: Schwabe Verlag
■ Todorova, M.N. 1993. Balkan Family Structure and the European Pattern: demographic developments in Ottoman Bulgaria. Washington DC.
■ Todorova, M.N. (ed.). 2004. Balkan Identities: Nation and Memory. Londres, Hurst and Copany.
■ Verdery, K. 1999. The political lives of dead bodies: reburial and post-socialist change. New York: Columbia University Press.