Perspectives Published: 30 October 2020 The feminist edition of Perspectives Magazine, a regional publication published annually by the Heinrich Böll Foundation, aims to present the perspectives of Southeastern Europe to an international audience, to analyze global and regional trends and to provide insights into developments and political debates. The theme of this year's issue is gender and feminism in the Western Balkans, which is presented through four thematic units (State of the Art, Gender in Transitions: Revolution is Female?, Interventions and Resistance), which gives an overview of the context, perception of gender and the state of women's rights, and opens the issue of gender by social (re-)evolution and conflicts, initiatives and practices that contribute to the dismantling of patriarchy and very concrete practices of resistance in our countries. Through the issues of gender violence, political participation, economic relations, ecology, activism, physicality and from the perspective of female scientists, activists, journalists and writers, we focus on a kind of strategy for women's rights in the Balkans: is it based on the premise that we do not get tired and give up. This issue of Balkan Perspectives was written by women and describes the rights and fights for gender equality which last for generations in the Western Balkans.
Bodo Weber: For the first time, Izetbegović and the SDA legitimized the third entity project with an agreement with the HDZ on Mostar Published: 26 October 2020 Senior Associate of the Democratization Policy Council Bodo Weber says that the agreement reached is not in for the future of Mostar or the whole of Bosnia and Herzegovina. By Adin Šabić
Brutality as a new normality Published: 14 October 2020 "It all started when the fake FB profile Fatima Hadzic USK called for protests. People were called to organize and return migrants, that is, to prevent their arrival in Velika Kladuša and surrounding areas." By Nidžara Ahmetašević
Refugee crisis in Bosnia: Political failure, violence and hatred Published: 13 October 2020 The country, from which hundreds of thousands of people fled during the war from 1992 to 1995 and were accepted in Western European countries, is treating refugees increasingly inhumanely. They are confronted with ignorance and harassment. The blame for the alarming conditions is assigned to the EU and its rigorous isolation policy. By Marion Kraske
25 years of separatism Published: 6 October 2020 Agenda coming ‘in the name of Croats in BiH’ relies almost entirely on the victimology/victorious narrative, with a populist aspiration to preserve the 'nation' endangered by majoritarianism in the Federation BiH. By Lejla Gačanica
Elections in Mostar marked by 47 – plurality dictated by democracy or deliberate fraud? Published: 23 September 2020 After not having been held for 12 years, the elections in Mostar on December 20 will be a historical event in the sense of reviving democracy in this city. By Adin Šabić
Marin Bago: Mostar is a cosmopolitan city, it cannot be divided! Published: 22 September 2020 Marin Bago, a prominent activist from Mostar, submitted the list of independent candidates “Pravo na Grad” [“Right to the City”] for the Local Elections in Mostar, planned to be held on 20 December 2020, to the Central Electoral Commission (CEC) today. By Adin Šabić
We are in the middle of a hybrid war - Interview with Xhabir Deralla Published: 17 September 2020 Marion Kraske does an interview with Xhabir Deralla from prominent organization CIVIL from North Macedonia
We are in the middle of the hybrid war - Interview with Xhabir Deralla Published: 17 September 2020 By Marion Kraske
Analyses: Mostar and the international community – like foreign tourists Published: 10 September 2020 Regarding the “political agreement on the amendments to the Electoral Law of BiH” reached in June between the leaders of two political parties, Bakir Izetbegović (SDA) and Dragan Čović (HDZ), so that after 12 years finally elections can be held in Mostar, the High Representative in BiH rushed to say how that was a “celebration of democracy”. To a bystander, it looked as if a heavy load was taken off his mind, so that now one can continue under that flag as well. Of course, the conclusions of the two party leaders were agreed in the presence of representatives of the international community, then adopted by the House of Peoples of the Parliamentary Assembly of BiH at the very last second – less than a month before the deadline imposed by the Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg by the judgement in the case of Ms. Irma Baralija. This citizen of Mostar sued Bosnia and Herzegovina because no elections have been held in that city since 2008! By Zlatko Dizdarević