War Sociology, Criminology and Sociology of Knowledge : Analysis of Bosnian–Herzegovinian Post-genocide Society
Autor: | Basic, Goran, Delić, Zlatan |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
pedagogy of emancipation
cultural production of differences pedagogy of work Pedagogy lifelong learning Pedagogik Sociology (excluding Social Work Social Psychology and Social Anthropology) enquiry-based learning Sociologi (exklusive socialt arbete socialpsykologi och socialantropologi) cooperative learning logic of naming differences democratic self-government |
Popis: | The purpose of this article is to analyse institutionalised paralogisms, social and economic inequalities, and frustrating consequences arising from decades of symbolic and real war and post-war violence against the population of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The historic background of this paper is the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992–1995), as presented in the reports of the United Nations and documents produced during international and national trials concerning war crimes. The analytical basis is a literature review of various studies from the domains of war sociology, criminology, and sociology of knowledge. Immanent antinomies, contradictions, and political, legal, and criminal perpetually institutionalise and reproduce the identitary references to war vocabulary. For this reason, creation of publicly responsible programs is necessary to evaluate the prescriptive impact of the domination of cultural and identity differences between peoples in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The genocide of Bosnian Bosniaks in the war against the Bosnian–Herzegovinian multicultural society urges the creation of a completely different description, prescription, logic of naming, and explanation strategy to achieve transitional change. The article criticized globalisation as a form of new colonisation and natural-science quantative emphasis. In the spirit of the analysed scientific literature, future scientific analyses should focus on the criminal, social, economic, ecological, anti-educational, sociopathological, and anomic consequences of the (catastrophic) impact of decades of symbolic and real war and post-war violence against the population of Bosnia and Herzegovina. (Conference canceled) |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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