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Preliminary communication

POLITICAL ABSTINENCE OF WOMEN IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA

Srđan Puhalo ; Prime Communications, Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Zlatiborka Popov Momčinović orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-6569-8791 ; Faculty of Philosophy, University of East Sarajevo, Pale, Bosnia nad Herzegovina


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Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine whether there is a difference between female abstinents in Bosnia and Herzegovina in terms of certain demographics (age, education, rural-urban, party and ethnicity) and socio-psychological characteristics (interest in politics, the ways of getting their information about politics, trust in institutions, dogmatism, nationalism, cosmopolitanism, the end justifies the means, the attitude towards the leader, conservatism, liberalism and authoritarianism). The study was conducted in the first half of March 2013, on a sample of 483 adult women who did not plan to vote in the upcoming elections, who in the past six years (three election cycles) either voted occasionally, or they voted, but have no intention of voting again, or they have never voted. We started from the assumption that the different modes of political abstinence differ with respect to the measured variables. The results show that the three categories of women abstinents differ in terms of certain socio-demographic variables: age, education, ethnicity, party affiliation and religious beliefs. There are differences among respondents concerning political interests. The greatest interest was found among the respondents who manipulate their turning out to the polls, followed by those who were disappointed in the elections, while the slightest interest in politics was among the respondents who have never voted. Television is still the dominant medium for getting information about political events, the second and third ones are newspapers and radio, but they are much less influential. Yet among the three categories of women abstinents significant differences were found only regarding television and radio. Three categories of women abstinents differ only in cosmopolitanism and liberalism variables. There is a difference between women abstinents in their confidence in institutions. The most trust in institutions is found in women who occasionally took part in the elections, followed by those who voted, but no longer do so. The least trust in institutions is found among women who have never voted.

Keywords

women; voting; political abstinence; political interest; Bosnia and Herzegovina

Hrčak ID:

148039

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/148039

Publication date:

6.11.2015.

Article data in other languages: serbian

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