ABSTRACT

In the summer of 1999, a group of Bosnian women politicians and leaders of local

non-governmental organizations (NGOs) were gathered in the city of Tuzla under

the auspices of the Bosnian League of Women Voters (Liga žena glasaa) to

discuss strategies for increasing women’s participation in formal politics. Senka

Nožica, a member of the civic opposition in the Federation and one of the most

prominent women active in Bosnian politics, held forth on the superiority of

women politicians over men:

Several months later, Irena Soldat-Jovanovi, a parliamentary representative from

Republika Srpska speaking on Bosnian television lamented the dramatic fall in the

number of women in formal politics which had accompanied the dissolution of

socialist Yugoslavia. While the socialist system had required women’s

participation through quotas, the multi-party elections of 1990 did away with such

requirements (although quotas for ethno-national representation were stipulated),

and only 4.9 percent of those elected in those pre-war elections were women (Ler-

Sofroni 1998: 91). 1 Soldat-Jovanovi therefore concluded:

Both of these women were appealing to popular notions of gender and politics

circulating in post-war Bosnia-Herzegovina. Politics itself is often gendered

through the common phrase, ‘politika je kurva’ (‘politics is a whore’), which is

used to emphasize the corrupt, fickle, and immoral nature of political deal-making

(Jaluši 1994; Grandits, Kolind, this volume). While politics is in this way

feminized, it is nonetheless understood and portrayed in everyday and official

discourses alike as a male arena where women, especially respectable women,

have no place. 2 Since the end of the war, however, women have increasingly been

active in a variety of capacities in the public sphere, engaging issues of political

importance, as well as directly in the realm of formal politics. 3 In fact, a broad-

based, multi-ethnic group of women NGO activists and politicians from a range of

political parties, with substantial backing from the ‘international community’, has

formed a movement of women calling for increased participation of women in

politics and attention to a variety of ‘women’s issues’.