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Multiculturalism in the Balkans. Prospects and perils

In the Balkans, multiculturalism has come to represent a defining feature and a cause of conflict simultaneously. The region, shaped by centuries of migrations, conquests, political upheavals and civil wars, with its complex mix of cultural diversity and political instability, serves as a global example of the failure of multicultural policies. Consequently, “Balkanism” and “Balkanization” have emerged as technical terms denoting conflict driven by identity-based fragmentation.

Multiculturalism refers to 1) the coexistence of diverse cultural, ethnic and religious communities within a society, and 2) the social and political theory that promotes cultural diversity. It uses legal and administrative logic that seeks to regulate the coexistence of different cultures within a polity, as well as social theory that addresses the plurality of perspectives on society, the state, science, education and culture itself. It is most commonly understood in two primary ways: descriptively, as a characterization of cultural diversity, and normatively, as a theory asserting that culture plays a significant role in politics and as a practice of granting culturally distinct groups (for instance, minorities) certain special rights. Ideally, it seeks to enable their full equality. In this sense, multiculturalism has captivated generations of academic authors, journalists, politicians, NGO workers and human rights advocates. 

February 28, 2025 - Miloš Milenković - Hot TopicsIssue 1-2 2025Magazine

Photo: jordeangelovic / Shutterstock

Anthropology’s struggles with multiculturalism 

Anthropological studies of human societies and cultures view multiculturalism in its own terms through the lived experience, practice and meanings attributed to cultural diversity. Anthropologists do not solely take up the category of multiculturalism either as policy or as theory. Instead, they research concrete and living historical, social and political contexts. Through ethnographic methods, we explore how individuals and groups navigate, negotiate and contest cultural boundaries, both in their everyday lives and through foundational narratives that link their heritage and their identity. Among the oldest anthropological perspectives on cultural diversity is the concept of cultural relativism, which emphasizes understanding cultures on their own terms rather than through the lens of one’s own cultural values. A method like this indeed respects cultural diversity and resists hierarchies or ethnocentrism, which are at the root of conflicts in multicultural societies. Anthropologists identify the complex, ever-changing nature of cultural identities and argue that diversity should be a resource, not a threat. Anthropologists examine power and structural inequalities within multicultural settings. We do this by investigating how dominant groups define cultural norms and the ways in which minority groups resist, accommodate, or assimilate under such pressures. For example, approaches to “othering” discuss how dominant discourses marginalize or stereotype minority communities, while approaches to “hybridity” discuss the ways in which cultural exchange gives rise to new, syncretic forms of identity and cultural expression. 

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