Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2017
This article investigates rconparticipation in politics as a rich set of moral, political, and cultural engagements. Contrary to the idea of apathy as an absence of political and social progress, Jessica Greenberg argues that nonparticipation can be an expression of complex and sophisticated responses to changing sociopolitical contexts. Greenberg also examines how such responses are affected by the global deployment of normative models of democratic success and failure. Starting with both policy and academic discourse about civic participation and popular Serbian narratives about politics and European belonging, Greenberg integrates the ethnographic material from her fieldwork in Serbia to illuminate the context in which such ideas reinforce understandings of democratic policies as elitist, corrupt, morally suspect, and disempowering. In conclusion, she suggests that researchers and practitioners should interrogate their own roles in creating and deploying frameworks for political success and failure and the impact these frameworks have on the lived experience of democracy.
I would like to thank Mark D. Steinberg, Douglas Rogers, and the three anonymous reviewers for Slavic Review for their close readings and extensive critical engagement with this piece. Dilip Gaonkar, Benjamin Lee, Keith Brown and Elizabeth Levy Paluck provided crucial feedback on earlier versions of this article. James Holston and Elizabeth Dunn offered helpful discussant comments on shorter versions. Research was made possible with support from the American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship for East European Studies; the Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Fellowship; and the International Research and Exchanges Board Individual Advanced Research Opportunities Fellowship. Writing was made possible through the support of the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs. Opinions expressed in this article are solely my own, as are any errors.
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3. Thanks to Benjamin Lee, Dilip Gaonkar, Olga Sezneva, Brian Edwards, David Wittenberg, Lars Toender, and Nasrin Kader for helping me to strengthen the analysis of this incident.
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21. The dichotomy of success and failure has had a real impact on Serbian political discourse, limiting horizons for democratic action and curtailing possibilities for critical perspectives on Serbia's past and future. Serbia is often cited as an exemplary failure among transition countries, just as the Balkans more generally were cited as the case study in European civilization's failure in the 1990s. Serbia enjoyed a brief moment of success on the world stage as an example of electoral-democratic revolution after the 5 October 2000 ouster of Milošević. But a refusal to comply with the Hague Tribunal and to make key arrests of indicted war criminals; a rise in nationalist, populist political parties; the 2003 assassination of Prime Minister Zoran Djindjić; and intransigence on negotiations for Kosovo's independence have landed Serbia back on the margins of democratic success stories in eastern Europe. This article is not intended to dispute the validity of these international demands for compliance. I am not arguing that, because international demands are embedded in relations of power, Serbia is any less responsible for its key role in the violence of the 1990s. Indeed it is crucial to make space in Serbian political discourse fora discussion of international relations of power that do not foreclose engagement with ethical questions of social and political responsibility. I seek to open up such a space by examining particular instantiations of how normative frameworks for liberal democracy have an impact on other aspects of political expression and possibility in Serbia—namely participation. In trying to break apart dichotomies of success and failure and participation and apathy, I hope to create some small space for considering social and political possibilities that are more complex than the either/or options to which Serbian political life has been reduced.
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