
Balkan Diskurs
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
globalvoices.org | Balkan Diskurs |Filip Noubel |Daria Dergacheva |Jean de Dieu SOVON
The Roma are the largest minority group in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) and are commonly exposed to prejudice, discrimination, and exclusion. Almir Agić, a 22-year-old Roma man from Ilijaš, near Sarajevo, fights prejudice with poetry and art, giving a voice to those who are invisible in society.
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2 weeks ago |
globalvoices.org | Filip Noubel |Daria Dergacheva |Balkan Diskurs |Jean de Dieu SOVON
War often reduces entire cultures and countries to one over-simplified narrative, particularly in the domain of news. Ukraine was first invaded by Russia in 2014, and then again in 2022, and that story dominates the vast majority of media coverage on Ukraine, given the extent of death and destruction, but also the resistance demonstrated by the Ukrainian people. But Ukraine is also home to its own multilingual and multiethnic literature, music, and art that cannot ignore war but is more than war.
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2 weeks ago |
globalvoices.org | Daria Dergacheva |Balkan Diskurs |Jean de Dieu SOVON
This article was originally published in Russian on April 17, 2025, on Novaya Vkladka, a content partner of Global Voices. Global Voices translated the article, edited it for clarity, and is republishing it with permission from Novaya Vkladka. In early April, an unusual passenger was traveling by bus from Volgograd to Moscow — a bat. It was being transported for treatment at the Moscow Zoo.
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1 month ago |
globalvoices.org | Balkan Diskurs |Oiwan Lam |Kanav Narayan Sahgal |Janine Mendes-Franco
This article by Amina Sejfić was originally published on Balkan Diskurs, a project of the Post-Conflict Research Center (PCRC). An edited version has been republished by Global Voices under a content sharing agreement. The Svrzo House, located in the heart of Sarajevo’s old quarter, is one of the most beautiful vestiges of Ottoman architecture in the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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Jan 27, 2025 |
everand.com | Balkan Diskurs
Originally published on Global Voices This article by Anja Zulić was originally published on Balkan Diskurs, a project of the Post-Conflict Research Center (PCRC). An edited version has been republished by Global Voices under a content sharing agreement. Food is a fundamental human need. However, from sociological and anthropological perspectives, it is so much more — associated with region, habits, lifestyle, customs, and even religion.
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