The invited lecture at the conference was dedicated to the reception of collective crime in the global, local and European memory, with the special emphasis on Bosnia and Herzegovina and Rwanda and the issue of invisible intersectionality of violent identities.
B.04 Guest lecture
COBISS.SI-ID: 814189The course aimed at a deeper understand. of conflict escalat. in the transit. periods, how they eventually cumulate in mass. violent events and what conseq. do these events have for the later forms of citizenship and polit. responsibility. It focused on the mass. collective violence accompanied by mass atrocities, their preparation and acting out, and the post-conflict de-escalation periods in cases such as former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. Discourses of collective identity and the intersections of gender, race/ethnicity and religion are key to understand the legitimiz. ideologies of violence.
B.05 Guest lecturer at an institute/university
COBISS.SI-ID: 713581The dissertation contains the comparative analysis of genocidal policies in two modern conflicts at the end of the 20th century – in former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. It develops synthetical and critical elaboration of the most contemporary discussions that deal with collective crime and violence, perpetrated at the intersections of the collective identity forming – where the dimensions of gender, race, ethnicity, religion, and class meet. It analyses those dimensions , and gives elements of understanding the processes that lead to the collective crime.
D.09 Tutoring for postgraduate students
COBISS.SI-ID: 239998720The paper represents analytical preparation of comparative approach to analysis of multiple intersectional discrimination in several countries. It concentrates on intersections of family, reproductive, and domestic violence policies.
B.03 Paper at an international scientific conference
COBISS.SI-ID: 696685The paper is the result of the research work conducted during the field trip in Bosnia and Herzegovina in July 2010, follow-up research of media in the digital database of Media Center Sarajevo, and using the insight given by the informants during conducted interviews. The main proven hypothesis is that commemorations of the last war in BH are reifying the concepts of ethno-national identity and promoting three different narratives of the war, while their moral and psychological function are bypassed by promotion of political agenda.
B.04 Guest lecture
COBISS.SI-ID: 857709