Diana Kapidzic and Aida Daidzic are founding members of BISER, a feminist human rights organization established by Bosnian women in response to the war against their country and its women. BISER has chapters in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Germany, and the United States. The following is a compilation of various speeches, talks, and interviews delivered by the two women during their fall 1993 U.S. tour
This article is a letter from a 26 year-old Serbian female, Ms. Zeljka Kasagic, of Banja Luka, Srpsk...
A two-day symposium featuring presentations by Esad Boškailo, Amila Buturović, Aleksandar Hemon, Ref...
This article explores the role of the local non-governmental association ‘Mothers of Srebrenica’ in ...
This article will discuss rape as a violation of women\u27s human rights in wartime, specifically ad...
The press and media have played a special role in the search for truth about this tragedy. Reporters...
This presentation was part of an international two-day virtual symposium: Bosnia, 25 Years After the...
Women played a significant role both during and after the Bosnian conflicts throughout the 1990s, as...
The Women in the Law Project of the International Human Rights Law Group (Law Group) sponsored a del...
The war in Bosnia officially ended in 1995 following outrage over the Srebrenica massacre, in which ...
Almost twenty years after the signing of the Dayton Peace Accords, which ended the physical violence...
During the summer of 2014, I lived in Sanski Most, Bosnia-Herzegovina, with funding from an Internat...
In 1992, a world conference urging the establishment of an international criminal tribunal was held ...
The number of immigrants from different countries has increased in the United States in the past few...
Alexandra Stiglmayer interviewed survivors of the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina in order to reveal, to a...
My research sought to examine the transition from war to post-war services provided in a women’s non...
This article is a letter from a 26 year-old Serbian female, Ms. Zeljka Kasagic, of Banja Luka, Srpsk...
A two-day symposium featuring presentations by Esad Boškailo, Amila Buturović, Aleksandar Hemon, Ref...
This article explores the role of the local non-governmental association ‘Mothers of Srebrenica’ in ...
This article will discuss rape as a violation of women\u27s human rights in wartime, specifically ad...
The press and media have played a special role in the search for truth about this tragedy. Reporters...
This presentation was part of an international two-day virtual symposium: Bosnia, 25 Years After the...
Women played a significant role both during and after the Bosnian conflicts throughout the 1990s, as...
The Women in the Law Project of the International Human Rights Law Group (Law Group) sponsored a del...
The war in Bosnia officially ended in 1995 following outrage over the Srebrenica massacre, in which ...
Almost twenty years after the signing of the Dayton Peace Accords, which ended the physical violence...
During the summer of 2014, I lived in Sanski Most, Bosnia-Herzegovina, with funding from an Internat...
In 1992, a world conference urging the establishment of an international criminal tribunal was held ...
The number of immigrants from different countries has increased in the United States in the past few...
Alexandra Stiglmayer interviewed survivors of the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina in order to reveal, to a...
My research sought to examine the transition from war to post-war services provided in a women’s non...
This article is a letter from a 26 year-old Serbian female, Ms. Zeljka Kasagic, of Banja Luka, Srpsk...
A two-day symposium featuring presentations by Esad Boškailo, Amila Buturović, Aleksandar Hemon, Ref...
This article explores the role of the local non-governmental association ‘Mothers of Srebrenica’ in ...