Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- BiH (1)
- Bosnia (1)
- Bosnia and Herzegovina (1)
- Bosnia-Herzegovina (1)
- Brčko (1)
-
- Brčko District (1)
- Consociational democracy (1)
- Consociationalism (1)
- Cum laude (1)
- DPA (1)
- Dayton Agreement (1)
- Dayton Peace Agreement (1)
- Education (1)
- Ethnic autonomy (1)
- Ethnonationalism (1)
- International intervention (1)
- Moderate education (1)
- Monoethnic education (1)
- Multiethnic education (1)
- Multiperspectivity (1)
- OHR (1)
- Peacebuilding (1)
- Peacekeeping (1)
- Political extremism (1)
- Post-conflict (1)
- Proportional power-sharing (1)
- Reconciliation (1)
- Stability (1)
- Statebuilding (1)
- Two schools under one roof (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Social Psychology
On Multiethnic Schools In Consociational Democracies: A Comparative Analysis Of Brčko District And Bosnia-Herzegovina, Jusuf Šarančić
On Multiethnic Schools In Consociational Democracies: A Comparative Analysis Of Brčko District And Bosnia-Herzegovina, Jusuf Šarančić
Lawrence University Honors Projects
The 1995 Dayton Peace Agreement both ended the Bosnian War and created the consociational democracy that exists in Bosnia and Herzegovina to this day. The ethnic autonomy created by the Dayton Agreement has resulted in a frozen conflict between ethnic groups that has manifested itself in the country’s monoethnic education system. This study explores the short-term stability under consociationalism and the long-term stability under a multiethnic education system. Additionally, this study explains the importance of the country’s only multiethnic education system in Brčko District and how it came into existence.
Political Psychology (Annotated Bibliography), Ingrid J. Haas
Political Psychology (Annotated Bibliography), Ingrid J. Haas
Department of Political Science: Faculty Publications
The field of political psychology explains political behavior as a function of both individual- and group-level psychological processes. While the field is interdisciplinary, political psychologists tend to work in either psychology or political science departments. Although the overall aim is often similar, researchers from each discipline approach the same questions in different ways, and interested scholars are encouraged to examine literatures from both fields. The general approach to research is to focus on individual political attitudes, emotion, beliefs, and behavior, and attempt to explain these phenomena using psychological research and theory. Historical approaches to research in this field often relied …