Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Ethnification of the Citizenry

dc.contributor.authorKucukalic Ibrahimovic, Esma
dc.date.accessioned2024-06-21T18:23:12Z
dc.date.available2024-06-21T18:23:12Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.description.abstractDespite the almost millenary territorial continuity of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the country has suffered constant and deliberate historical obstructions of denial of its statehood due to its status as a multiethnic republic. The three majority groups that make up the territory – Serbs of Orthodox faith, Croats of Catholic faith, and Muslims – coexisted united until war broke down in 1992, a tragedy whose trigger was the ethnic ideology of identity populism that had been forged in the previous years and would become innate for the following generations. Since then, Bosnia and Herzegovina has been immersed in a long-lasting crisis – aggravated by the war in Ukraine – as a result of a poorly resolved peace and which has trapped the region in a convoluted system of ethnic weights and counterweights.eng
dc.description.filiationUEVspa
dc.description.impactNo data JCR 2023spa
dc.description.impactNo data SJR 2023spa
dc.description.impact0,01 C4 IDR 2023spa
dc.description.sponsorshipSin Financiaciónspa
dc.identifier.citationKucukalic Ibrahimovic, Esma. (2024). Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Ethnification of the Citizenry. Quaderns de La Mediterrània, 36, 266–273.spa
dc.identifier.issn1577-9297
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11268/12934
dc.language.isoengspa
dc.peerreviewedNospa
dc.relation.publisherversionhttps://www.iemed.org/publication/bosnia-and-herzegovina-and-the-ethnification-of-the-citizenry/eng
dc.rights.accessRightsopen accessspa
dc.subject.sdgGoal 16: Promote just, peaceful and inclusive societies
dc.subject.unescoEuropaspa
dc.subject.unescoCuestiones étnicasspa
dc.subject.unescoNacionalidadspa
dc.titleBosnia and Herzegovina and the Ethnification of the Citizenryspa
dc.typejournal articlespa
dspace.entity.typePublication

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