TY - JOUR
T1 - Between fragmenting and multiplying: Scale-shift processes in Serbian and Croatian anti-war activisms
AU - Bilic, Bojan
N1 - Bojan Bilić ist Psychologe und politischer Soziologe und forscht zu LGBTQ Aktivismus, LGBTQ Psychotherapie und der Anthropologie der Nicht-Heterosexualität und der Geschlechtervarianz im postjugoslawischen Raum.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - This paper follows the almost contemporaneous emergence of the two primary antiwar initiatives in Belgrade and Zagreb to explore how they acted as hotbeds from which permanent human rights organizations appeared in the newly created nation-states. Drawing mostly upon in-depth interviews with antiwar activists from Serbia and Croatia, I argue that the dominant patterns of protest expansion were different in the two countries. While cooperation and tensions existed within both antiwar groups, the Antiwar Campaign of Croatia acted as a broker, leading toward the multiplication of civic initiatives; on the other hand, the Belgrade Center for Antiwar Action was characterized by ideological, professional, and personal divisions, which caused a rapid fragmentation of antiwar undertakings. This paper outlines the main reasons for such expansion patterns (scale-shift processes) and discusses them in the light of recent theoretical advances in political contention studies.
AB - This paper follows the almost contemporaneous emergence of the two primary antiwar initiatives in Belgrade and Zagreb to explore how they acted as hotbeds from which permanent human rights organizations appeared in the newly created nation-states. Drawing mostly upon in-depth interviews with antiwar activists from Serbia and Croatia, I argue that the dominant patterns of protest expansion were different in the two countries. While cooperation and tensions existed within both antiwar groups, the Antiwar Campaign of Croatia acted as a broker, leading toward the multiplication of civic initiatives; on the other hand, the Belgrade Center for Antiwar Action was characterized by ideological, professional, and personal divisions, which caused a rapid fragmentation of antiwar undertakings. This paper outlines the main reasons for such expansion patterns (scale-shift processes) and discusses them in the light of recent theoretical advances in political contention studies.
UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00905992.2012.747505
U2 - 10.1080/00905992.2012.747505
DO - 10.1080/00905992.2012.747505
M3 - Article
SN - 0090-5992
VL - 41
SP - 801
EP - 814
JO - Nationalities Papers: the journal of nationalism and ethnicity
JF - Nationalities Papers: the journal of nationalism and ethnicity
IS - 5
ER -