This collective volume addresses the issues of systemic reform in Serbia, primarily through the lens of individuals and households, at the particular moment in which it was written (twenty years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, nine years since the revival of transformation processes, two years after the stabilization of the pro-European orientation and on the eve of the world economic crisis). The authors discuss how much macroeconomic policy, decentralization and local planning, and household strategies and individual lifestyles have developed and stabilized compared to the onset of the radical systemic transformation; in other words, to what extent a new system of social relations has begun to reproduce itself through citizens’ everyday life. The chapters are based on empirical evidence from various sources.
Slobodan Cvejić (ed.)