Flying Flags at Weddings in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Nationalism and the Limit of Flag Power
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Keith Doubt, Wittenberg University
Version: View help for Version V1
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Project Citation:
Doubt, Keith . Flying Flags at Weddings in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Nationalism and the Limit of Flag Power. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2021-09-22. https://doi.org/10.3886/E149241V1
Project Description
Summary:
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This study examines the practice of ethnic communities in Bosnia and Herzegovina flying national, foreign, ethnic, entity, or religious flags at wedding ceremonies in public spaces. A clustered, stratified, random sample of 2,500 subjects over the age of eighteen is drawn from the country’s population, including the two entities, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republika Srpska and Brčko District. Survey questions involving face-to-face structured questions ask participants whether flags were flown at their weddings, whether they saw flags flown at others' weddings, which flags were flown, and attitudes toward the wedding custom. Variations by age, religiosity, education, ethnicity, type of flag flown, voting behavior, voting attitudes, and political party affiliation are reported.
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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weddings;
flags;
wedding ceremonies;
nationalism;
flag power;
ethnicity;
ethnic conflict;
patriotism;
voting behavior;
political participation;
political parties
Geographic Coverage:
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Bosnia and Herzegovina
Time Period(s):
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1945 – 2018
Universe:
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Married inhabitants in Bosnia and Herzegovinia over 18
Data Type(s):
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survey data
Collection Notes:
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Survey questions about whether people flew a flag at their wedding ceremony or saw others do so and their attitudes toward the social custom were included in an omnibus
survey in Bosnia-Herzegovina conducted by Mareco Index Bosnia. Following
prescribed guidelines regarding ethical inquiry, transparency, and protection of
human subjects, a clustered, stratified, random sample of 2,500 subjects was
drawn from the country’s population, including the Federation of Bosnia-
Herzegovina and Republika Srpska. The sampling followed the random route technique for selecting households for face-to-face interviews. The technique of nearest birthday was used to select an individual within the household for participation. The survey contained categorical questions
that were answered yes or no to generate binomial variables. Independent
variables included in the omnibus survey were age, ethnicity, gender, income, religion, voting behavior, political attitudes, and political party affiliation.
Methodology
Sampling:
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The sampling followed the random route technique for selecting households for face-to-face interviews. The technique of nearest birthday was used to select an individual within the household for participation.
Collection Mode(s):
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face-to-face interview
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