The Serbian Paramilitary Units: From Heroes of a Nation to Reviled War Criminals - and Back Again
A Public Lecture by Dr. Maria Vivod
Thursday 2:30 – 4:00 18 July 2013
Third World Studies Center, Lower Ground Floor, Palma Hall,
University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City
A Public Lecture by Dr. Maria Vivod
Thursday 2:30 – 4:00 18 July 2013
Third World Studies Center, Lower Ground Floor, Palma Hall,
University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City
Please click here for the playlist of the video recordings of the lecture.
PROGRAM
2:30 – 2:35
OPENING REMARKS
Ricardo T. Jose
Director, Third World Studies Center and
Professor, Department of History
College of Social Sciences and Philosophy, UP Diliman
2:35 – 2:40
INTRODUCTION OF SPEAKER
2:40 – 3:00
LECTURE
Maria Vivod
Associate researcher - Ethnologist
Centre National de Recherches Scientifiques
Strasbourg, France
3:00 – 3:50
OPEN FORUM
3:50 – 4:00
SUMMARY
MODERATOR
Stefan Khittel
Visiting Research Fellow, Third World Studies Center and
Research Fellow, Austrian Institute for International Affairs
About the lecture
Little was known in Serbia how many paramilitary units existed and were employed in the conflicts in Croatia and later Bosnia and Kosovo. In 1994, the United Nations Security Council reported that in the conflicts in the territories of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), the Republic of Croatia, and to a lesser extent, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 82 “paramilitary organizations” were deployed. In the first years (1991-1999) of the armed clashes that accompanied the decomposition of the socialist Yugoslav Federation, in a relatively short time the ‘guys’ from various paramilitary units that were given ample media coverage in the national media of the 1990s suddenly turned from ‘good’ into ‘bad’. Formerly seen as heroes, widely exploited in the Milošević-era, a decade after the conflict they have fallen into oblivion: only few perpetrators were prosecuted in the mean-time for war-crimes and the actual role they had played in various war crimes and the genocide is still unknown to the Serbian public, Immediately after the fall of the regime, it has been discovered to the public that they had abused their power, the situation and status of ‘protectors and heroes’. For a part of the population, they remain the symbol of everything that was wrong with the Serbian government and its elite during the 1990s. However, due to last year’s come-back of the warmongering nationalists of the 1990s who won the elections, the former ‘heroes of the nation’ have regained their place in the Serbian historical narrative as the undisputed heroes of a lost cause, keeping their status as role-models of the young generations.
About the speaker
Dr. Maria Vivod is Associate Researcher – Ethnologist at CNRS (Centre National de Recherches Scientifiques), ‘Cultures et Societies in Europe’ in Strasbourg, France. She has a PhD in Ethnology from the University Marc Bloch, Strasbourg, France and an MA in Master French Literature, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Novi Sad, Yugoslavia/Serbia. Her research interests are on Identity-Ethnic-Social Conflicts and Crisis, Ethnic belonging, World Tradition and Change, Politics of the Balkans, Societies in Transition, Eastern European Anthropology, Medical Anthropology, Social Mobility and Migration, Visual Anthropology. Her fields of expertise: Central- (Hungary, Slovakia), Eastern- (Rumania) European countries and the Balkans (Serbia, Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro).
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