New Belgrade after 1999: Spatial Violence as De-socialisation, De-Romanisation and De-historisation
ORCID
- Bobic, Nikolina: 0000-0002-0997-785X
Abstract
New Belgrade after 1999 is associated with the transition from a socialist and single-party state to a consumer capitalist and multi-party system, with the latter perceived as an indicator of democracy. This paper asks if and how this transitional period points to NATO’s 1999 bombing campaign still being in-operation through spatial violence by other means, with these means related to the negation of difference and the transformation of everyday life and social values. Might this spatial violence be even more coercive than that of the war as it manifests through the convergence of military, legal, governmental and economic entities of international “redevelopment” agencies working in the name of “security” along with the Serbian government? This paper explores this proposition by focusing on the post-1999 transformation and re-modernisation of New Belgrade as an elimination of difference through processes of de-socialisation, de-Romanisation and dehistorisation connected with neo-liberal privatisation.
DOI
10.1080/13264826.2014.1036491
Publication Date
2015-06-03
Publication Title
Architectural Theory Review
Issue
3
ISSN
1326-4826
Organisational Unit
School of Art, Design and Architecture
Recommended Citation
Bobic, N. (2015) 'New Belgrade after 1999: Spatial Violence as De-socialisation, De-Romanisation and De-historisation', Architectural Theory Review, (3). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13264826.2014.1036491