2020
DOI: 10.1080/14683857.2020.1805890
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The exclusionary side of (women’s) social citizenship in Southeastern Europe: childcare policy development in Bosnia-Herzegovina and gender, social and territorial inequalities

Abstract: The article explores the shifts in (women's) social citizenship in Bosnia-Herzegovina and its effect on the development of childcare policy in the 1945-2019 period. Gendered, selective childcare policy, which was inherent in the socialist notion of social citizenship and aimed to emancipate women as 'workermothers', deteriorated in the transition period when ethnicity became prioritised over gender and class. Exclusionary citizenship practices increased with the post-1990 reforms as gender and social inequalit… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Also, ECEC affordability did not improve, rather, Montenegro (in 2016) and Serbia (in 2017) abolished the state-defined ECEC affordability mechanisms (Table 1), opening space for greater providers' autonomy in defining (higher) parental fees and possible deepening of class and territorial inequalities in ECEC affordability. Providers' autonomy in determining parental fees remains in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia, primarily affecting low-income mothers in less developed (typically rural) areas where fees are typically higher (Dobrotić et al, 2018;Dobrotić and Obradović, 2020). Instead of investments in ECEC with the transition, the other four PYCs started to prioritize reforms aiming to support familial (that is, women's) care in the early parenting phase.…”
Section: Post-1990 Reforms: a Growing Divergence Among And Within Pycsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Also, ECEC affordability did not improve, rather, Montenegro (in 2016) and Serbia (in 2017) abolished the state-defined ECEC affordability mechanisms (Table 1), opening space for greater providers' autonomy in defining (higher) parental fees and possible deepening of class and territorial inequalities in ECEC affordability. Providers' autonomy in determining parental fees remains in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia, primarily affecting low-income mothers in less developed (typically rural) areas where fees are typically higher (Dobrotić et al, 2018;Dobrotić and Obradović, 2020). Instead of investments in ECEC with the transition, the other four PYCs started to prioritize reforms aiming to support familial (that is, women's) care in the early parenting phase.…”
Section: Post-1990 Reforms: a Growing Divergence Among And Within Pycsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, ECEC services remained underdeveloped, limiting female employment. For example, in 1990, less than one-tenth of children aged 3–6 participated in ECEC in Bosnia-Herzegovina, around one-quarter in Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro and 55.7% in Slovenia, much less than 75.2% in Czechia or 85.3% in Hungary (Dobrotić and Obradović, 2020; Zrinščak, 2002). Enrolment rates also varied within countries, with more developed (typically urban) areas performing better (Stropnik, 1989), thus limiting affordable ECEC to employees in more developed areas, and dual-earners were prioritized through preferential enrolment criteria (Dobrotić, 2019; Savezna skupština, 1966).…”
Section: The (In)equality Dynamic Of Childcare-related Policy Develop...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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