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<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/archive/6220</link>
<language>en_GB</language>
<title>SEE Portal - English - SEE Portal/English/SEE Portal - Homepage/In Depth/SEE Indepth &gt; Guides/Women/Gender Issues/Women/Gender Issues&gt;Interviews, Analyses, Comments</title>
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<title>It Is Not Ramadan, It is Nationalism</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/151376/1/6220</link>
<description>Husein Oru&amp;#269;evi&amp;#263; from OKC Abraševic youth and cultural centre from Mostar talked to Slobodanka Deki&amp;#263;, activist of the Q Organization, about the coming First Queer Festival in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Festival has caused quite a reaction, albeit negative, in the public, earlier this month. In solidarity with the Q Organization, OKC opened its doors as a public space that is open to all topics to be discussed, especially the topics regarding oppressed populations.</description>
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<title>National Strategy for Prevention of Domestic Violence 2008-2010</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/150398/1/6220</link>
<description>The Government of Croatia adopted, in its 274th Session, the National Strategy for Prevention of Domestic Violence 2008-2010.</description>
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<title>You have Rights! Demand Protection from Domestic Violence</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/150371/1/6220</link>
<description>This year’s campaign You have right! Demand protection from domestic violence, will be implemented as a mutual action of Akcija Zdruzhenska, ESE, National SOS Phone Line for victims, ministry of Labor and Social Affairs and Ministry of Interior.</description>
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<title>Women and the 2007 Elections in Kosovo </title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/150305/1/6220</link>
<description>Kosovo is on the brink of a new era.  Kosovo’s upcoming elections on November 17th give us a chance to prove to ourselves, to women and men from our international coalitions for peace and justice and to the entire international community, our readiness to build a just and sustainable peace and inclusive democracy, says the Regional Women\\\'s Lobby for Peace, Security and Justice in SEE.</description>
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<title>Gender and ICT Policy in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Re-thinking ICT development through Gender</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/link/gotolink/addhit/76727</link>
<description>In this article, Lamija Kosovic examines the current ICTs situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina, paying particular attention to the development of a National ICT Policy Strategy, and the responses towards the need to integrate gender concerns by both the women's national machinery and civil society organisations.</description>
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<title>Do We Know How to Live with the Law on Gender Equality?</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/143640/1/6220</link>
<description>How many of you have heard of the Law on Gender Equality? Do you know what does it mean for men and women to have equal rights in B&amp;H society? It is hard to imagine any serious work on gender equality done without support in a state's legislation, and B&amp;H has just such a Law for three years now.</description>
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<title>Target The Abuser - Show His Face </title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/143326/1/6220</link>
<description>Stories and media attention on incidences of violence against women often targets the woman. Stories are sensationalised, sometimes sexualised. Instead of condemning the abuser or perpetrator's action, survivors are narrated to hold at least partial blame for the violence.</description>
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<title>Korac Should Apologize to Bosnian Women</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/135754/1/6220</link>
<description>Lidija Korac, sitting member of the B&amp;H Central Election Commission, in her appearance in the “Korak” show on Hayat TV (June 27, 2006, 21:00 hours), allowed herself to say, among other misogynist statements, that “...not creating a family, should be seen as failure (for the women)”.</description>
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<title>Identity Issue</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/131051/1/6220</link>
<description>How could it happen that today, at the beginning of the 21st Century, in a country that pretends to be (actually claims that it has always been) European, we have attempts within the institutionalized psychiatry, to “treat” homosexuality with hormonal therapy? How can a person, certified as competent by the official system, believe that homosexuality is a biological condition, an illness, that can be treated as physical aberation?</description>
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<title>Marking of International Women Day in Croatia or Suppressing Women Resistance with Red Roses</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/129314/1/6220</link>
<description>A real tsunami of events was noted on March 8 this year. Glas Slavonije weekly reports that hundreds of women organized dusk-till-dawn parties at the Firefighters’ Clubs in Petrijevci and Satnica, while the women of Zmajevci treated themselves to a male stripper show. The “RUTA” women association from the island of Cres organized an exhibition of wedding dresses, while the Sabor (Croatian parliament) presented the members of the “weaker sex” with several dozens of chocolates and red roses.</description>
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<title>Men Continue to Control the Financial Power</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/128106/1/6220</link>
<description>Jasminka Dzumhur, National Human Rights Officer with UN High Commission for Human Rights in Bosnia and Herzegovina since 2001, works in Sarajevo and shares her time between Sarajevo and Zenica. For years, she had been active in one of the oldest and strongest women NGOs in B&amp;H, Medika from Zenica, and later with the Centre for Legal Assistance for Women, also in Zenica. Human rights, and women human rights in particular, have been her main area of interest for over 11 years.</description>
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<title>Kosova Has Many Instruments for Gender Equality, Alas, Inapplicable </title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/123886/1/6220</link>
<description>To get a realistic picture of gender equality in Kosova, OneWorld Southeastern Portal has interviewed one of top women activists in the field, Ms. Igballe Rogova, Executive Directress of Kosova Womens Network – KWN.</description>
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<title>Combating domestic violence in BiH</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/link/gotolink/addhit/69264</link>
<description>November 25, 2005 marks the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women .The narratives of these two women attest to the fact that there continues to be victims of domestic violence in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) and that collective efforts have been made to better the situation. The improvements can be partially attributed to the international community’s decision to address the issue forthrightly after the war. Their initiatives encouraged citizens of BiH to tackle this t</description>
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<title>Endlessly Commercial</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/111298/1/6220</link>
<description>&quot;Roll it, Snap it, Light it Up – Typically Male”, “Adopts to all Surfaces” are just two advertising campaign slogans putting women and female bodies in direct commercial “use” in Serbia. Sexist to the core, often banal in their context, these advertisements undoubtedly violate gender equality – a woman is identified with a cigarette, car tire, a light bulb. Serbia still lacks the Law on Advertising, but even if it gets it, the women doubt it that it would change anything for the better.</description>
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<title>Inexcusable Differences</title>
<link>http://see.oneworldsee.org/article/view/109168/1/6220</link>
<description>OneWorld SEE SSLA Editor, Borka Staletovic, comments on the recent attack in Novi Sad, in which an 27-year old girl was attacked and beaten up by a skinhead gang because her short hairstyle looked &quot;lesbian&quot; to them.</description>
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