Chapter Introduction
A Balkan Laboratory of Citizenship
Author(s)
Štiks, Igor
Collection
European Research Council (ERC)Language
EnglishAbstract
The introductory chapter explains why Yugoslavia and the post-Yugoslav region, due to frequent constitutional changes, provides such an interesting and insightful example for studying modern politics and it shows why citizenship offers necessary lenses to understand political and social processes. It explains what do we mean by citizenship, in theory and practice, and why we introduce a heuristic concept of citizenship regime that encompasses legal and administrative side of inclusion and exclusion, social and political dynamic of membership and the influence of ideologies and everyday experiences of citizenship. The introduction shows the â citizenship gapâ in the literature covering the former Yugoslavia, the ideological conflicts over the concept and its practices and their inexplicable marginalization in the scholarship focused on the construction and, mostly, destruction of Yugoslavia. It also defines modern citizenship as a tool for various political and social purposes in this region over the last century. A study of transformations of citizenship represents thus an alternative political history of Yugoslavia and the post-Yugoslav states.
Keywords
citizenship; nationalism; yugoslavia; political community; nations; the post-yugoslav states; european integration; citizenship regime; socialism; nationality; citizenship; nationalism; yugoslavia; political community; nations; the post-yugoslav states; european integration; citizenship regime; socialism; nationality; Breakup of Yugoslavia; Capitalism; Civil and political rights; Economic; social and cultural rights; Ethnic nationalism; Federalism; Liberal democracyDOI
10.5040/9781474221559.ch-001OCN
1030817962Publisher
Bloomsbury AcademicPublisher website
https://www.bloomsbury.com/academic/Publication date and place
London, 2015Grantor
Classification
Society and Social Sciences
Politics and government