Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T07:35:08.709Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Rebuilding multi-ethnic communities in post-conflict nations: returnee assessment of municipal services in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2020

Sevinc Rende*
Affiliation:
Department of Economics, Isik University, Istanbul, Turkey
Dorothy J. Rosenberg
Affiliation:
International Graduate Programme in Peace, Conflict and Development Studies, the Universitat Jaume I, Castellon, Spain
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Local administrative units are crucial to the reconstruction of a sustainable multi-ethnic social consensus in fragile states. Using the delivery of public goods and social services in Bosnia and Herzegovina as our case study, we ask whether the level of heterogeneity in community composition has any effect on resident opinion of public services at the municipal level. We find that post-war residency status is not the only factor defining community-level heterogeneity and that evaluations of public services at the local level are not neutral to community composition.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adhikari, B., & Lovett, J. C. (2006). Institutions and collective action: Does heterogeneity matter in community-based resource management? Journal of Development Studies, 42(3), 426445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Agarwal, B. (2010). Does women's proportional strength affect their participation? Governing local forests in South Asia. World Development, 38(1), 98112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barakat, S., & Zyck, S. A. (2009). State building and post-conflict demilitarization: Military downsizing in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Contemporary Security Policy, 30(3), 548572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belloni, R. (2005). Peacebuilding at the local level: Refugee return to Prijedor. International Peacekeeping, 12(3), 434447.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bojicic-Dželilovic, V., Cauševic, F., & Tomaš, R. (2004). Bosnia and Herzegovina: Problems, obstacles and outcome of the reforms. European Balkan Observer, 2(4), 29.Google Scholar
Bowles, S., & Gintis, H. (2002). Social capital and community governance. The Economic Journal, 112, F419F436.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, E. E., & Brooks, F. (2006). African American and Latino perceptions of cohesion in a multiethnic neighborhood. American Behavioral Scientist, 50(2), 258275.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, J. N. (2010). Religion and reconciliation in Bosnia & Herzegovina: Are religious actors doing enough? Europe-Asia Studies, 62(4), 671694.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coffe, H., & Geys, B. (2006). Community heterogeneity: A burden for the creation of social capital? Social Science Quarterly, 87(5), 10531072.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collantes Celador, G. (2009). Becoming “European” through police reform: A successful strategy in Bosnia and Herzegovina? Crime, Law and Social Change, 51, 231242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Costalli, S., & Moro, F. N. (2011). The patterns of ethnic settlement and violence: A local-level quantitative analysis of the Bosnian War. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 34(12), 20962114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahlman, C., & Ó Tuathail, G. (2005). Broken Bosnia: The localized geopolitics of displacement and return in two Bosnian places. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 95(3), 644662.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deets, S. (2006). Public policy in the passive-aggressive State: Health care reform in Bosnia-Herzegovina 1995–2001. Europe-Asia Studies, 58(1), 5780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Divjak, B., & Pugh, M. (2008). The political economy of corruption in Bosnia and Herzegovina. International Peacekeeping, 15(3), 373386.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eastmond, M. (2006). Transnational returns and reconstruction in post-war Bosnia and Herzegovina. International Migration, 44(3), 141166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Everly, R. (2006). Complex public power regulation in Bosnia and Herzegovina after the Dayton peace agreement. Ethnopolitics, 5(1), 3348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagan, A. (2005). Civil society in Bosnia ten years after Dayton. International Peacekeeping, 12(3), 406419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gelman, A., & Hill, J. (2009). Data analysis using regression and multilevel/hierarchical models (10th ed., p. 82). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Grødeland, Å. B. (2008). Suspiciously supportive or suspiciously obstructive? The relationship between local government and NGOs in Bosnia & Herzegovina, Serbia, and Macedonia. International Journal of Public Administration, 31, 911952.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heimerl, D. (2005). The return of refugees and internally displaced persons: From coercion to sustainability? International Peacekeeping, 12(3), 377390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hulsey, J. W. (2010). Democratization “Why did they vote for those guys again?” Challenges and contradictions in the promotion of political moderation in post-war Bosnia and Herzegovina. Democratization, 17(6), 11321152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Håkansson, P., & Sjöholm, F. (2007). Who do you trust? Ethnicity and trust in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Europe-Asia Studies, 59(6), 961976.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jeffrey, A. (2007). The geopolitical framing of localized struggles: NGOs in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Development and Change, 38(2), 251274.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jokay, C. (2001). Local government in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In: Kandeva, E. (Ed.), Stabilization of local governments (pp. 89140). Budapest: OSI/LGI.Google Scholar
Kabeer, N. (2000). Social exclusion, poverty and discrimination towards an analytical framework. IDS Bulletin, 31(4), 8397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kappler, S., & Richmond, O. (2011). Peacebuilding and culture in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Resistance or emancipation? Security Dialogue, 42(3), 261278.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kett, M. E. (2005). Internally displaced peoples in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Impacts of long-term displacement on health and well-being. Medicine, Conflict, and Survival, 21(3), 199215.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kivimäki, T., Kramer, M., & Pasch, P. (2012). The dynamics of conflict in the multi-ethnic state of Bosnia and Herzegovina: Country conflict-analysis study. Sarajevo: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung.Google Scholar
Kondylis, F. (2010). Conflict displacement and labor market outcomes in post-war Bosnia and Herzegovina. Journal of Development Economics, 93(2), 235248.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kruks-Wisner, G. (2011). Seeking the local state: Gender, caste, and the pursuit of public services in post-tsunami India. World Development, 39(7), 11431154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, S. K. (2004). Death, disability, displaced persons and development: The case of landmines in Bosnia and Herzegovina. World Development, 32(12), 21052120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naidu, S. C. (2009). Heterogeneity and collective management: Evidence from common forests in Himachal Pradesh, India. World Development, 37(3), 676686.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nastav, B., & Bojnec, Š. (2007). The shadow economy in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Slovenia: The labor approach. Eastern European Economics, 45(1), 2958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ó Tuathail, G., & Loughlin, J. O. (2009). After ethnic cleansing: Return outcomes in Bosnia-Herzegovina a decade beyond war. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 99(5), 10451053.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Østby, G. (2008). Polarization, horizontal inequalities and violent civil conflict. Journal of Peace Research, 45(2), 143162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Park, A., & Wang, S. (2010). Community-based development and poverty alleviation: An evaluation of China's poor village investment program. Journal of Public Economics, 94(9–10), 790799.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pasalic-Kreso, A. (1999). Education in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Minority inclusion and majority rules: The system of education in BiH as a paradigm of political violence on education. Current Issues in Comparative Education, 2(1), 613.Google Scholar
Perry, V. (2010). Fifteen years of the human dimension in Bosnia and Herzegovina — The Ebb and flow of state-building. Security and Human Rights, 21(4), 279291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petrovic, M. (2008). The role of geography and history in determining the slower progress of post-communist transition in the Balkans. Communist and Post-Communist Studies, 41(2), 123145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pickering, P. M. (2009). Explaining support for non-nationalist parties in post-conflict societies in the Balkans. Europe-Asia Studies, 61(4), 565591.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Platteau, J.-P. (2004). Monitoring elite capture in community-driven development. Development and Change, 35(2), 223246.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salihbasic, S. (2011). Development prospects of health and reform of the fiscal system in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Materia Socio Medica, 23(4), 221226.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sarajlić, E. (2011). The return of the consuls: Islamic networks and foreign policy perspectives in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Southeast European and Black Sea Studies, 11(2), 173190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soberg, M. (2008). The quest for institutional reform in Bosnia and Herzegovina. East European Politics & Societies, 22(4), 714737.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stefansson, A. H. (2010). Coffee after cleansing? Co-existence, co-operation, and communication in post-conflict Bosnia and Herzegovina. Focaal, 2010(57), 6276.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tabeau, E., & Bijak, J. (2005). War-related deaths in the 1992–1995 armed conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina: A critique of previous estimates and recent results. European Journal of Population/Revue européenne de Démographie, 21(23), 187215.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Touquet, H., & Vermeersch, P. (2008). Bosnia and Herzegovina: Thinking beyond institution-building. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 14(2), 266288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tveit, A. D., Cameron, D. L., & Kovac, V. B. (2014). “Two Schools under one Roof” in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Exploring the challenges of group identity and deliberative values among Bosniak and Croat students. International Journal of Educational Research, 66, 103112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weidmann, N. B. (2011). Violence “from above” or “from below”? The role of ethnicity in Bosnia's Civil War. The Journal of Politics, 73(4), 11781190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, R. C. (2006). The significance of property restitution to sustainable return in Bosnia and Herzegovina. International Migration, 44(3), 4061.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Witmer, F. D. W., & Loughlin, J. O. (2009). Satellite data methods and application in the evaluation of war outcomes: Abandoned agricultural land in Bosnia-Herzegovina after the 1992–1995 conflict. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 99(5), 10331044.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woelk, J. (2006). Reforms of local government in SEE: Closer to Europe? In Dallago, B. (Ed.), Transformation and European integration the local dimension (pp. 85197). London: Palgrave-Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar