Land privatization and management in Serbia - Policy in limbo
Abstract
Unlike in most other European post-socialist countries, in Serbia, land policy and property reforms have only been partially implemented. A new approach is neither fully defined nor institutionalized a decade after the end of ethnic conflict and the Milosevic era. The context and characteristics of Serbia's urban-land privatization reforms and the land development management of its capital, Belgrade, illustrate the complexities involved in establishing new institutional arrangements under circumstances of overall societal transition. The negative implications of the prolonged transition to a new land policy and related land-management instruments only serve to aggravate the already difficult social, economic, and spatial development situation. The deeply embedded Serbian political culture may be the overriding cause of these difficulties.
Source:
Journal of Architectural and Planning Research, 2012, 29, 4, 306-317Collections
Group
RAUmPlanTY - JOUR AU - Nedović-Budić, Zorica AU - Zeković, Slavka AU - Vujošević, Miodrag PY - 2012 UR - https://raumplan.iaus.ac.rs/handle/123456789/209 AB - Unlike in most other European post-socialist countries, in Serbia, land policy and property reforms have only been partially implemented. A new approach is neither fully defined nor institutionalized a decade after the end of ethnic conflict and the Milosevic era. The context and characteristics of Serbia's urban-land privatization reforms and the land development management of its capital, Belgrade, illustrate the complexities involved in establishing new institutional arrangements under circumstances of overall societal transition. The negative implications of the prolonged transition to a new land policy and related land-management instruments only serve to aggravate the already difficult social, economic, and spatial development situation. The deeply embedded Serbian political culture may be the overriding cause of these difficulties. T2 - Journal of Architectural and Planning Research T1 - Land privatization and management in Serbia - Policy in limbo VL - 29 IS - 4 SP - 306 EP - 317 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_209 ER -
@article{ author = "Nedović-Budić, Zorica and Zeković, Slavka and Vujošević, Miodrag", year = "2012", abstract = "Unlike in most other European post-socialist countries, in Serbia, land policy and property reforms have only been partially implemented. A new approach is neither fully defined nor institutionalized a decade after the end of ethnic conflict and the Milosevic era. The context and characteristics of Serbia's urban-land privatization reforms and the land development management of its capital, Belgrade, illustrate the complexities involved in establishing new institutional arrangements under circumstances of overall societal transition. The negative implications of the prolonged transition to a new land policy and related land-management instruments only serve to aggravate the already difficult social, economic, and spatial development situation. The deeply embedded Serbian political culture may be the overriding cause of these difficulties.", journal = "Journal of Architectural and Planning Research", title = "Land privatization and management in Serbia - Policy in limbo", volume = "29", number = "4", pages = "306-317", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_209" }
Nedović-Budić, Z., Zeković, S.,& Vujošević, M.. (2012). Land privatization and management in Serbia - Policy in limbo. in Journal of Architectural and Planning Research, 29(4), 306-317. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_209
Nedović-Budić Z, Zeković S, Vujošević M. Land privatization and management in Serbia - Policy in limbo. in Journal of Architectural and Planning Research. 2012;29(4):306-317. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_209 .
Nedović-Budić, Zorica, Zeković, Slavka, Vujošević, Miodrag, "Land privatization and management in Serbia - Policy in limbo" in Journal of Architectural and Planning Research, 29, no. 4 (2012):306-317, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_raumplan_209 .