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Civic and Uncivic Values
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Table of Contents

Preface Part One - Introduction 1. Serbia's Corrupt Path to the Rule of Law: An Introduction 2. Serbia after MiloA'evia: The Rebirth of a Nation Part Two - Political and Social Values 3. Serbian Civic Values in a European Context 4. The EU in the Values and Expectations of Serbia: Challenges, Opportunities, and Confrontations 5. Orthodox Values and Modern Necessities: Serbian Orthodox Clergy and Laypeople on Democracy, Human Rights, Transition, and Globalization 6. The Social Values of Serbian Youth Part Three - Media and Films 7. The Post-2000 Media Situation in Serbia 8. We All Live Two Lives: Serbian Cinema & Changing Values in Post Yugoslavia Part Four - Schools, Gender, and Nationalism 9. Value Changes in the Interpretations of History in Serbia 10. Nationalism as a Religion: Examples from Contemporary Serbia 11. Engendering Transitional Justice: Political Responsibility in Serbia Part Five - Kosovo as Myth and as Politics 12. Dead Kings and National Myths: Why Myths of Founding and Martyrdom Are Important 13. Discursive Practices and Semiotic Representations: Serbian Rhetoric about Montenegro and Kosovo 14. Kosovo in Serbian Politics since MiloA'evia 15. Inter-ethnic Dialogue between Serbs and Albanians in Serbia/Kosovo, 1996-2008 Part Six - Conclusion 16. The Power of Values (A conclusion) List of Contributors Index

About the Author

Ola Listhaug is Professor of Political Science at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim. Sabrina P. Ramet is Professor of Political Science at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim. Dragana Dulia is Professor of ethics and social and human sciences at the Faculty of Security, University of Belgrade, and member of the Legal Council of the President of Serbia.

Reviews

"The overall thesis of the book is straightforward: unless Serbia moves from the uncivic values which still dominate public space and discourse, toward civic values, the prospects for democratic consolidation and liberal democracy in Serbia remains dim. The system of uncivic values, which flourished under the ancien régime (under Milošević), nationalism, irredintism, chauvinism, is still well and alive after 12 years of transition in Serbia. All things considered, this is well written and well researearched volume which can be read by wider audience, becond just academic community"
*South Slav Journal*

"The volume is largely successful in offering a useful guide to “the struggle for values in Serbia”. It is admirable that it includes contributions by those who are in a sense fighting in the very trenches of Serbian politics, but if the main utility of such volumes is in providing a useful map of the struggle, then the “view from the trenches” might not be too useful. A number of contributors in this volume tend to vacillate between outlining and analyzing, on the one hand, and anguished lamenting on the other. This reviewer tends to share their values and condemn the same enemies but finds the more judgmental chapters less useful for navigating the battlefi eld than the chapters that try to abstain from overt judgments. The best are those that are both in the trenches and able to rise above them for a more synoptic survey of the battlefield. A number of contributors do that admirably. Even better, when such a trench-fighter as Čolović analyzes his own ironic distance we get a welcome breather—a glimpse of Serbia not only as a seething pit of uncivic values, a quagmire of stubborn antimodernism, but as a place where there is even laughter."
*Slavic Review*

"The contributors to this volume demonstrate how traditional, provincial and nationalist values, referred to as uncivic, still obstruct the European aspirations of the biggest republic of the former Yugoslavia. In that respect, the authors adopt an analytical approach to examine the impact of civic and uncivic values in a variety of Serbian societal and political contexts... It seems reasonable to assume that the book will be of interest to an audience beyond just academia. I most warmly recommend this volume as an extremely useful and engaging addition to the literature in the field."
*International Affairs*

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