2020
DOI: 10.1177/1350506820958740
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Ethnic minority women in the Serbian academic community

Abstract: The aim of this article is to discuss the position of ethnic minority women (Hungarian, Slovak, and Romanian) in relation to their career-building in the Serbian higher education system and reaching decision-making positions (such as rector, vice-rector, dean, head of department, etc.). The author defines two hypotheses: (1) that there are invisible biases (gender-based, ethnicity-based, and segregation-related) in the sciences that put ethnic minority women in a challenging position when attempting to build a… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
(76 reference statements)
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“…A prominent historian from Serbia, Dubravka Stojanović (2010, p. 277), has claimed that Serbia sunk to the lowest point in its history during the 1990s. In the grip of the Yugoslav succession wars, Serbia lost the territories that its elite believed should belong to Serbia, and the country became an embarrassment and lost the trust of neighbouring nations and its own national minorities (Stojanović, 2010), who often endured atrocities in public spaces (Lendák‐Kabók, 2022). However, what forms the basis of the official policy of remembrance of the wars of the 1990s in Serbia is precisely the populist discourse of the authoritarian democracy associated with the current government.…”
Section: Memory Politics Of the 1990smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A prominent historian from Serbia, Dubravka Stojanović (2010, p. 277), has claimed that Serbia sunk to the lowest point in its history during the 1990s. In the grip of the Yugoslav succession wars, Serbia lost the territories that its elite believed should belong to Serbia, and the country became an embarrassment and lost the trust of neighbouring nations and its own national minorities (Stojanović, 2010), who often endured atrocities in public spaces (Lendák‐Kabók, 2022). However, what forms the basis of the official policy of remembrance of the wars of the 1990s in Serbia is precisely the populist discourse of the authoritarian democracy associated with the current government.…”
Section: Memory Politics Of the 1990smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their review article of the literature available on academic career development, Zacher et al (2019) underline that research in the eld tends to focus on gender inequality, but not so much on intersectionality (see for example Curtin et al, 2016;Fritsch, 2016;Lendák-Kabók, 2021). Regarding mentoring practices (also happening through social media), all the empirical studies mentioned by Zacher et al (2019) -which are mostly in the health science -attest a positive effect on career success, for the "protégés" but also for their mentors (see for example Feldman et al, 2010;Iversen et al, 2014)…”
Section: Academic Career Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gender-studies scholars have elaborated intersectionality as a theory for differentiating processes and relations of power and inequality in Europe (Davis and Zarkov, 2017), but sparse attention has been paid to the intersectional analysis of gender and ethnicity among sub-state minorities (Kymlicka, 2007;Lend ak-Kab ok, 2020) in the Western Balkan region, while the intersection of gender and ethnicity in STEM has not been discussed previously. The Vojvodinian context of intersectionality in Serbia allows us to both ethnicity and gender simultaneously (Lend ak-Kab ok, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%