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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.20901/pm.62.4.02

Retraditionalization as Socialization? The Making or the Myth of Croatia’s 1990s Generation

Bartul Vuksan-Ćusa orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-5158-9164 ; University of Zagreb, Faculty of Political Science


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Abstract

Although retraditionalization is often invoked to explain contemporary youth‎ attitudes in Croatia, existing studies provide no firm evidence of its impact‎ on those who came of age in the 1990s. This article treats the 1990s as a‎ potential socialization setting and tests whether the retraditionalization project‎ imprinted the cohort that reached adulthood amid war, state-building, and ‎the Tuđman regime. Using ten waves of the Croatian National Electoral Studies‎(1995–2024) and an age–cohort–period framework, we offer a systematic ‎assessment of this hypothesis. Contrary to expectations, we find no durable‎ traditionalist imprint among the 1990s cohort across religious, nativist, and‎ gender-conservative domains. Instead, patterns point to gradual liberalization ‎between cohorts and to long-term stability in identity-anchored attitudes tied ‎to political cleavages. Robustness tests confirm that formative exposure to the ‎Tuđman era does not increase traditionalism and may reduce it. The findings‎ challenge prevailing assumptions about youth socialization and the legacies ‎of the 1990s.‎

Keywords

Retraditionalization; Political Attitudes; Political Socialization; Survey Research; Political Generations

Hrčak ID:

344938

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/344938

Publication date:

27.2.2026.

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