Researching Media Assistance as a Tool of Democratisation and State building in Post Conflict Societies – Lessons from the Case of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Authors

  • Nidzara Ahmetasevic University of Graz

Keywords:

media, democracy, media assistance, media development, democratisation, state building, post conflict reconstruction, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Abstract

This paper aims to give insights into my research on media assistance and its effects on democratisation and state building processes in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnia). I try to analyse a process which lasts more than 15 years, and includes different aspects, from law making to establishing new media. I argue that most of the measures have been carried out in a state of imposition, in a semi-protectorate, that is Bosnia after the war. This period of post-war reconstruction in Bosnia is difficult to research for many reasons, starting from the obvious fact that processes are still going on, to the fact that different international players who were involved in the process over the years, hardly left archives available to the public to be analysed. What is left sometimes does not give a complete picture. In the paper different methods will be presented, that have been applied in order to overcome these difficulties. Thus, I try to give some recommendations for other researchers working on similar topics.

Author Biography

Nidzara Ahmetasevic, University of Graz

Nidzara Ahmetasevic is a PhD candidate of the Joint Programme in Diversity Management and Governance. Her field of research is on democratisation and media development in post conflict countries. Before coming to Graz, she spend one year at the University of Kent, UK, after being awarded with the Chevening Scholarship. Nidzara holds a Master’s degree in Human Rights and Democratisation in South East Europe, a joint programme of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies of the University of Sarajevo and Bologna. Her thesis was on the political propaganda in the broadcast media in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina during the wars of the 1990s. Before her master studies, as a Ron Brown Fellow (US State Department award supporting young professional from Central and Easter Europe) she spent one year at the DeWitt Walice Centre for Media and Democracy, Duke University, North Carolina. Nidzara has a long career as a journalist covering human rights, foreign policy and transitional justice issues, in particular.

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How to Cite

Ahmetasevic, N. (2012). Researching Media Assistance as a Tool of Democratisation and State building in Post Conflict Societies – Lessons from the Case of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Global Media Journal - German Edition, 2(2). Retrieved from https://globalmediajournal.de/index.php/gmj/article/view/115