Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.5613/rzs.53.3.2

What Women Politicians Could, Would, and Should, but Cannot Do. Perceptions of Women Parliamentarians Regarding Barriers to Political Representation of Women in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Zlatiborka Popov Momčinović orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-6569-8791 ; Faculty of Philosophy, University of East Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina


Full text: english pdf 598 Kb

page 365-395

downloads: 478

cite

Supplements: RevSoc53_3 Supplement Popov Momcinovic 2023.pdf


Abstract

This paper analyses the main barriers to women’s political representation in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BH) from the perspective of female parliamentarians. The theoretical section presents the main obstacles to women’s political representation, followed by an overview of trends in the political representation of women and the controversies surrounding the presence of women in politics within the ethnocratic context of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Using the data from qualitative research, gathered through in-depth interviews with female MPs from BH elected to state and entity parliaments, this paper analyses and discusses the main obstacles to the political representation of women. They include challenges relating to family life and traditional gender roles, internal party processes and dynamics, especially informal relations among men, lack of support in election campaigns and various manoeuvres to circumvent quotas, shrunken space for women in parliaments, and distorted representation in the media. The experiences of the interlocutors are strongly gendered, and all the mentioned obstacles prove to be relevant, regardless of their varying impact on individual women MPs. Even interlocutors who have not personally encountered certain obstacles acknowledge their existence, noting that their female colleagues in politics have experienced them, sometimes in a brutal manner. There is agreement among the interlocutors that women are severely disadvantaged in politics. Therefore, serious additional positive measures should be taken to improve gender equality, given that the ethnocratic system favours ethnic representation and men maintain a firm grip on political power in post-conflict BH society.

Keywords

political representation of women; women parliamentarians; Bosnia and Herzegovina; ethnonationalism; gender (in)equality

Hrčak ID:

313615

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/313615

Publication date:

31.12.2023.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 1.047 *