Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)

Ethnic diversity and cultural heterogeneity are a reality for the city of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. The changing ethnic demography and redressed power-balance between majority and non-majority groups on local level have spurred a turbulent conflict – that of governance of diversity in...

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Main Author: Mojanchevska Katerina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-12-01
Series:SEEU Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/seeur-2019-0017
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spelling doaj-251315dc07634e06b5f96d685289cab12021-09-05T14:01:51ZengSciendoSEEU Review1857-84622019-12-01142305010.2478/seeur-2019-0017seeur-2019-0017Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)Mojanchevska Katerina0Independent social science researcher, graduate from the Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus, University Rotterdam, The NetherlandsEthnic diversity and cultural heterogeneity are a reality for the city of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. The changing ethnic demography and redressed power-balance between majority and non-majority groups on local level have spurred a turbulent conflict – that of governance of diversity in public space. This paper aims to understand citizens’ views on how language, ethnicity, religion and collective cultural symbols are legitimised through the political, social and symbolic value of public spaces in their neighbourhoods. The results indicate that the political value of public spaces to stimulate contact, deliberation and debate among citizens on issues of their concern is undermined. Public spaces in Skopje are not planned and managed through a wide forum of citizen engagement. The colliding ethnonationalism and symbolic power struggle between the major ethnic groups result in co-ethnic preferences in socialisation and selection of public spaces. The concept of “the appropriate citizen” constructed through the symbolic meaning of public spaces perpetuates ethnonational rhetoric and supports expressions of citizenship that are limited to the nation-state and ethnic identification. In opposition to contact theory, this research indicates that self-segregation of ethnic groups can be prevalent in multi-ethnic neighbourhoods. This should make us think of the context where the contact is established and not only of the content of the interaction.https://doi.org/10.2478/seeur-2019-0017diversitysocial interactionpublic spaceurban planningskopje
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mojanchevska Katerina
spellingShingle Mojanchevska Katerina
Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)
SEEU Review
diversity
social interaction
public space
urban planning
skopje
author_facet Mojanchevska Katerina
author_sort Mojanchevska Katerina
title Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)
title_short Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)
title_full Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)
title_fullStr Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)
title_full_unstemmed Diversity and the Difficulty of Living it: The Case of Public Spaces in Skopje (North Macedonia)
title_sort diversity and the difficulty of living it: the case of public spaces in skopje (north macedonia)
publisher Sciendo
series SEEU Review
issn 1857-8462
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Ethnic diversity and cultural heterogeneity are a reality for the city of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. The changing ethnic demography and redressed power-balance between majority and non-majority groups on local level have spurred a turbulent conflict – that of governance of diversity in public space. This paper aims to understand citizens’ views on how language, ethnicity, religion and collective cultural symbols are legitimised through the political, social and symbolic value of public spaces in their neighbourhoods. The results indicate that the political value of public spaces to stimulate contact, deliberation and debate among citizens on issues of their concern is undermined. Public spaces in Skopje are not planned and managed through a wide forum of citizen engagement. The colliding ethnonationalism and symbolic power struggle between the major ethnic groups result in co-ethnic preferences in socialisation and selection of public spaces. The concept of “the appropriate citizen” constructed through the symbolic meaning of public spaces perpetuates ethnonational rhetoric and supports expressions of citizenship that are limited to the nation-state and ethnic identification. In opposition to contact theory, this research indicates that self-segregation of ethnic groups can be prevalent in multi-ethnic neighbourhoods. This should make us think of the context where the contact is established and not only of the content of the interaction.
topic diversity
social interaction
public space
urban planning
skopje
url https://doi.org/10.2478/seeur-2019-0017
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