National minorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina

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The first Italian immigrants to Štivor, 1883
Ukrainians in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in 1890, modern Prnjavor
Czech wedding guests in Nova Vesi, near Srbac, 1934
Polish farmers in Bosnia at a procession
The Slovene Triglav Society, founded in Banja Luka in 1934

The legislation of Bosnia and Herzegovina recognises three constituent peoples and 17 national minorities (nacionalne manjine). These latter include 2.73% of the total population of the country,[1] i.e. 96,539 persons. The biggest community is the Romani people in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which are estimated at around 58,000 persons.

Legislative framework

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The state-level Law on the Protection of National Minorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina was adopted in 2003, followed by the Law on the Protection of National Minorities of the Republika Srpska in 2005, and the Law on the Protection of National Minorities in Federation of BiH in 2008. Similar laws were passed also by the Government of the Brcko District of BiH and three cantons of the Federation of BiH.[2] In June 2020 the Brcko District adopted a new Law on the rights of National Minorities.[3]

Bosnia and Herzegovina ratified the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages in 2010.[2]

National Minority Councils

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Since 2006, the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina established the Council of National Minorities, as a special advisory body to give opinions, advice and proposals to the Parliamentary Assembly of BiH on all matters concerning the law, position and interests of national minorities in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The BiH National Minority Council is composed of 17 representatives of national minorities, one representative on behalf of each ethnic minority.[2]

The National Minority Council of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina entity was established in March 2016.

The National Minority Council of the Republika Srpska entity was established in 2005.

The National Minority Council of Sarajevo Canton was established in 2012, with extended powers of legislative initiative.

The National Minority Council of the Brcko District was established in May 2022,[4][5] on the basis of the new district law on national minorities adopted in October 2020[6]

Associations

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In Bosnia and Herzegovina exists more than 100 national minority CSOs. Generally, associations operate individually or within the alliances. The Association of National Minorities of Republika Srpska (ANMRS) was established in 2003 as a voluntary and open non-partisan association of citizens. It gathers, as an umbrella organisations, 40 member associations of national minorities in Republika Srpska.[2]

Education in minority languages

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Italian and Ukrainian are taught in one and four schools respectively in the town of Prnjavor (15 and 24 pupils in total in 2015).[2]

German, Russian, and Italian are taught as foreign languages in several high schools throughout the country.[2]

Associations and embassies also organise several elective courses of minority languages as foreign languages.[2]

Several newsletters and bulletins are published periodically in minority languages, including four in Slovene, and one each in Hungarian (Új dobos),[7] Macedonian (Vinozito), Italian (Stella d'Italia) and Czech (Banjalucki Krajani)[2]

Demographics

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Minority 1991 census 2013 census Associations
Albanians in Bosnia and Herzegovina 4,925 2,659+150 (self declared: Kosovars, Shqiptars, Bosnian-Albanians etc.)
Czechs in Bosnia and Herzegovina Česká beseda
Germans in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Hungarians in Bosnia and Herzegovina Association of Hungarians Sarajevo HUM
Italians in Bosnia and Herzegovina Association of Italians of the City of Banja Luka; Association of Citizens of Italian Origin (Sarajevo); UGIP "Rino Zandonai" Tuzla
Jews in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Macedonians in Bosnia and Herzegovina 1,596 738 Association of Macedonians of RS
Montenegrins of Bosnia and Herzegovina 10,071 1,883
Poles in Bosnia and Herzegovina 526 258 Association of Poles "POLSA"
Romani people in Bosnia and Herzegovina 8,864 12,583 (est. 58,000) 84 associations; BiH Roma Committee
Romanians in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Russians in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ruthenians in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Slovaks in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Slovenians in Bosnia and Herzegovina 937 Slovenian Cultural Association "Cankar" Sarajevo
Turks in Bosnia and Herzegovina 267 1,108
Ukrainians in Bosnia and Herzegovina 2,331
Population of Bosnia and Herzegovina according to ethnic group 1948–1996
Ethnic
group
census 1948 census 1953 census 1961 census 1971 census 1981 census 1991 census UNHCR 1996 census 2013[8] popul.change 1991-2013
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
Bosniaks 788,403 30.7 891,800 31.3 842,248 25.7 1,482,430 39.6 1,629,924 39.5 1,902,956 43.5 1,805,910 46.1 1,769,592 50.11 -133,364 +6.64%
Serbs 1,136,116 44.3 1,264,372 44.4 1,406,057 42.9 1,393,148 37.2 1,320,644 32.0 1,366,104 31.2 1,484,530 37.9 1,086,733 30.78 -279,371 -0.43%
Croats 614,123 23.9 654,229 23.0 711,665 21.7 772,491 20.6 758,136 18.4 760,852 17.4 571,317 14.6 544,780 15.43 -216,072 -1.95%
Yugoslavs 275,883 8.4 43,796 1.2 326,280 7.9 242,682 5.5 2,570 0
Montenegrins 3,094 0.1 7,336 0.3 12,828 0.4 13,021 0.3 14,114 0.3 10,071 0.2 1,883 0
Roma 442 0.0 2,297 0.1 588 0.0 1,456 0.0 7,251 0.2 8,864 0.2 12,583 0,4
Albanians 3,642 0.1 3,764 0.1 4,396 0.1 4,925 0.1 2,569 0
Others/undeclared 23,099 0.9 27,756 1.0 28,679 0.8 36,005 1 63,263 1.5 80,579 1.9 58,196 1.5 110,449 3
Total 2,565,277 2,847,790 3,277,948 3,746,111 4,124,008 4,376,403 3,919,953 3,531,159

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Census of population, households and dwellings in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2013: Final results" (PDF). Agency for Statistics of Bosnia and Herzegovina. June 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h ACFC/SR/IV(2016)007
  3. ^ Sarajevo Times
  4. ^ Coe.int
  5. ^ OHR.int
  6. ^ OSCE BiH
  7. ^ "Elektronikus Periodika Archívum - Új dobos".
  8. ^ "1. Stanovništvo prema etničkoj/nacionalnoj pripadnosti - detaljna klasifikacija". Popis.gov.ba. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  • on the short-lived Polish/Ukrainian community of BIH, see Husnija Kamberovic's paper "Iseljavanje Poljaka iz Bosne i Hercegovine 1946. godine." [1]