Logo
Nazad
64 2. 10. 2015.

‘Who sows hunger, reaps rage’: on protest, indignation and redistributive justice in post-Dayton Bosnia-Herzegovina1

This paper reflects upon the socio-economic legacies of Dayton Peace Accords, and the ways in which these legacies were brought into focus by the 2014 Bosnian Uprising. This wave of protests, which started in February of 2014 in the industrial city of Tuzla but quickly spread all over the country, was the (un)anticipated result of rising popular indignation over high unemployment, economic decline and general sense of futurelessness. Protesters attacked both symbolic and literal centres of power, targeting local political elites whose self-serving behaviours and insolent attitudes helped deepen the post-war political and economic crisis. Combining long-term ethnographic research of post-war grassroots politics with more recent investigations of the effects of post-war deindustrialization, this paper anchors the new politics of indignation in Bosnia in its broader historical context. The 2014 protests, this paper argues, demarkate Dayton Bosnia as a postsocialist space, deeply transformed by ongoing socio-economic restructuring, and changing conceptions of political solidarity, social justice and political action.


Pretplatite se na novosti o BH Akademskom Imeniku

Ova stranica koristi kolačiće da bi vam pružila najbolje iskustvo

Saznaj više