Date: 2021
Type: Article
Post-partition citizenship policies : lessons from post-Yugoslav federal states
Publius : the journal of federalism, 2021, Vol. 51, No. 2, pp. 307–326
DZANKIC, Jelena, KEIL, Soeren, Post-partition citizenship policies : lessons from post-Yugoslav federal states, Publius : the journal of federalism, 2021, Vol. 51, No. 2, pp. 307–326
- https://hdl.handle.net/1814/69245
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
Citizenship policies are important tools of inclusion and exclusion in a post-partition context. In most cases, they reflect the unitary and mono-ethnic character of newly established states. Their function in countries and territories where an ethnonational break-up resulted in further ethnically diverse societies is far more complex. Citizenship in multilevel states created through state disintegration is a counterintuitive combination of (1) the legacies of the old citizenship tradition and replications of the old federal structure, and (2) processes of ethnic engineering and designing group-centric citizenship regimes. Legacies of the old structure are framed by the modalities of break-up and initial determination of citizenry (e.g., the absence of zero solution), but strongly mirror elements of the previous multilevel construction of citizenship, including bottom-up derivation, ethno-national determination of membership, voting rights and representation. Discontinuities in citizenship policies reflect wider tensions between nation- and state-building (and destruction), and how these processes have been molded through different international influences. We undertake a case-study of two post-Yugoslav multilevel states, Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia/the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro, with the intent of drawing broader conclusions on how citizenship policies can keep states together or break them apart.
Additional information:
Published online: 09 November 2020
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/69245
Full-text via DOI: 10.1093/publius/pjaa038
ISSN: 1747-7107; 0048-5950
Publisher: Oxford University Press
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