Civil society in Bosnia Herzegovina. From the late ‘80s to nowadays: a historical perspective

Autors/ores

  • Chiara Milan European University Institute

Resum

A set of historical and political factors has shaped the evolution of civil society in Bosnia Herzegovina over the years. The socialist rule influenced the way in which citizens organized, while in the aftermath of the war the intervention of foreign donors and agencies brought about the prospering of domestic non-governmental organizations (NGOs). In the recent period, protests and participatory practices emerged and spread throughout the country, stamping indelibly its social fabric and influencing the practices of formal organizations. This article provides an overview of the evolution of domestic civil society during the country’s recent past, examining how it evolved from the end of the socialist period to nowadays. The article begins by exploring the grassroots initiatives and the anti-war protests of the late 1980s, instances of an “unofficial” civil society stemmed from the liberalization of a socialist system on the brink of collapse. Next, it describes the mushrooming of civil society organizations in the aftermath of the war, before focusing on the grassroots civic initiatives unfolded in the 2000s, peaked with the 2013-14 protests and the surge of participatory assemblies known as “plenums.”

Paraules clau

civil society, post-conflict countries, social movements, anti-war initiatives, non-governmental organizations

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Recorded interviews

RI 19, #JMBG activist, Sarajevo, November 2013

RI 23, spokesperson of TACSO (Technical Assistance for Civil Society Organizations), Sarajevo, January 2014

RI 30, activist, plenum of Sarajevo. Sarajevo, April 2014

Biografia de l'autor/a

Chiara Milan, European University Institute

Chiara Milan is a research fellow at the Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences of the Scuola Normale Superiore, and a PhD candidate in the Department of Social and Political Sciences of the European University Institute (EUI). She is currently involved in the project “Mobilizing for Democracy - Collective Action and the Refugee Crisis”, for which she investigates the protests and grassroots initiatives in solidarity with refugees in Austria and in the countries of former Yugoslavia in the context of the 2015-16 so-called refugee crisis. She conducted extensive research on the dynamics of mobilization and collective action in the Yugoslav successor states, with a specific focus on the 2012-14 protests in Bosnia Herzegovina, which constitute the subject of her PhD thesis. At CSEES she examines the outcomes of the 2014 protests in Bosnia Herzegovina. She holds a MA in Development Studies from the University of Bologna and a BA in Political Science and International Relations from the University of Padova, and contributes to several online journals dealing with politics in the area of former Yugoslavia.

Publicades

07-07-2017

Com citar

Milan, C. (2017). Civil society in Bosnia Herzegovina. From the late ‘80s to nowadays: a historical perspective. Tiempo Devorado, 4(2), 272–296. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/tdevorado.113

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