Industrijski odnosi u Hrvatskoj: društvena integracija ili tržišni sukob
In: Biblioteka industrijska demokracija
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In: Biblioteka industrijska demokracija
In: Revija za sociologiju: Sociological review, Band 51, Heft 3, S. 309-316
ISSN: 1846-7954
In: Politička misao, Band 55, Heft 3, S. 82-103
World Affairs Online
In: International migration: quarterly review, Band 48, Heft 2, S. 133-160
ISSN: 1468-2435
AbstractThe authors report on representative field research dealing with ethnic Serb returnees to Croatia. The total sample consisted of 1,500 randomly chosen persons from a population of 120,000 officially registered Serb returnees to Croatia. The main questionnaire was answered by 403 respondents. Drawing on references relating to the concept of sustainability, they further develop it through differentiation of seven sustainability aspects or dimensions: safety; socio‐demographic structure of returnees; socio‐economic conditions of return; refugee experiences; citizenship and minority rights; and subjective perceptions of sustainability. According to field findings, between 35 and 45 per cent of the registered returnees reside permanently at the addresses they reported upon return, and an additional 3,5 per cent moved to other locations within Croatia. At the same time, between 35 and 42 per cent actually reside in their refugee countries (mostly in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina). Some 6 per cent of returnees occasionally stay in Croatia and occasionally outside of it. The interviewers were unable to get any reliable information regarding permanent stay for 15 per cent of the people from the sample. Finally, 11 per cent of them have, in the meantime, passed away since registered return started in 1996. The research results confirm the prevailing impression that Serb returnees are predominantly old people. The average age of all interviewed family members is around 51.The findings and conceptualization suggest the need for a differentiated approach to a returnee body to better understand the complexity of a return. First, we have to distinguish among refugees potential returnees from non‐returnees (political and economic ones). Returnees themselves can then be grouped into several types: I) unconditional permanent; II) conditional permanent; III) semi‐returnees or trans‐national; IV) non‐formal and V) formal or quasi‐returnees.
In: Revija za socijalnu politiku: Croatian journal of social policy, Band 15, Heft 1
ISSN: 1845-6014
Aim. To assess the determinants and reasons for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine hesitancy in Croatia. Methods. The data were collected through a sociological survey by using a mixed-mode approach (computer-assisted web interviewing and computer-assisted telephone interview) on a national sample of 765 adults aged 18 or above. Bivariate (χ2 test) and multivariate (binary logistic regression) statistical methods were used. Results. The rate of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was relatively high (35%), with unequal distribution across demographic groups. Binary logistic regression with demographic characteristics as predictors showed that women, younger age groups (especially 25-34-year-olds), persons residing in households with children, inhabitants of smaller settlements, and persons with lower levels of education had higher odds of vaccine hesitancy. Trust in the five main actors responding to the COVID-19 pandemic (the National Civil Protection Headquarters, Government, health care system, scientists-researchers, and media) was also a significant predictor of vaccine hesitancy. Risk perception was an even stronger predictor: persons who perceived SARS-CoV-2 infection as a small risk were more than ten times likelier to be vaccine hesitant than those who perceived it as a great risk. Conclusion. Social groups that are more prone to vaccine hesitancy need to be approached through different channels and messages by taking into account their trust in institutions and risk perception.
BASE
Aim To assess the determinants and reasons for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine hesitancy in Croatia. Methods The data were collected through a sociological survey by using a mixed-mode approach (computer-assisted web interviewing and computer-assisted telephone interview) on a national sample of 765 adults aged 18 or above. Bivariate (χ2 test) and multivariate (binary logistic regression) statistical methods were used. Results The rate of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was relatively high (35%), with unequal distribution across demographic groups. Binary logistic regression with demographic characteristics as predictors showed that women, younger age groups (especially 25-34-year-olds), persons residing in households with children, inhabitants of smaller settlements, and persons with lower levels of education had higher odds of vaccine hesitancy. Trust in the five main actors responding to the COVID-19 pandemic (the National Civil Protection Headquarters, Government, health care system, scientists-researchers, and media) was also a significant predictor of vaccine hesitancy. Risk perception was an even stronger predictor: persons who perceived SARSCoV-2 infection as a small risk were more than ten times likelier to be vaccine hesitant than those who perceived it as a great risk. Conclusion Social groups that are more prone to vaccine hesitancy need to be approached through different channels and messages by taking into account their trust in institutions and risk perception.
BASE
In: Politička misao: croatian political science review = Political thought, Band 57, Heft 3, S. 195-223
ISSN: 1846-8721
Cilj rada je istražiti dinamiku udruživanja hrvatskih ratnih veterana te ustanoviti ključna obilježja koja doprinose članstvu u veteranskim organizacijama. Analiziraju se podaci veteranskih organizacija iz Registra udruga RH za razdoblje od 1991. do 2014. godine te podaci o socio-demografskim karakteristikama, veteranskom identitetu i političkim preferencijama članova veteranskih organizacija prikupljeni anketnim istraživanjem 2015. godine. Rezultati pokazuju da je članstvo veteranskih organizacija određeno ratnim iskustvom, socio-demografskim te političkim obilježjima. Veteranske organizacije su dominantno mjesnog karaktera, a ključne interne razlike u udruživanju određene su posljedicama rata i načinom ulaska u rat. Zabilježene su značajne razlike između članova i ne-članova veteranskih organizacija u smislu da su članovi u većoj mjeri orijentirani prema desnom političkom spektru, što pokazuje da u određenim prilikama veteranske organizacije mogu značajno usmjeravati kolektivno djelovanje ratnih veterana u političkoj areni. U radu se raspravljaju uvidi o asocijacijskoj gustoći veterana, razlike između članova i ne-članova veteranskih organizacija te obrasci i ciklusi veteranskog udruživanja.
In: Politička misao, Band 57, Heft 1, S. 195-223
World Affairs Online
In: Südosteuropa: journal of politics and society, Band 65, Heft 3, S. 542-564
ISSN: 2364-933X, 2701-8202
Abstract
How do households with inactive or unemployed members face growing risks and uncertainty? The present study tackles this problem with a case study on Croatia, a country at the bottom of the European Union's (EU) scale of economic activity rate. The low level of activity that has characterized Croatia for more than twenty years has been accompanied by a continuously high unemployment rate, which has further increased since 2009. In this context, households with (long-term) inactive or unemployed members have had to develop alternative coping strategies. In order to identify and examine these strategies, in 2014 we conducted a mixed-method study, including a quantitative survey of 453 households and 37 semi-structured interviews. We identified six household strategies, more or less 'successful' in terms of the household's material position. In this essay we further examine these strategies' characteristics and implications, with a focus on the profiles of households employing specific strategies.
In: Croatian accession to the European Union. Vol. 4, The challenges of participation, S. 161-188
This paper deals with the analysis of the utilitarian model of the explanation of popular support for Croatian entry into the European Union. The utilitarian model for explicating support or lack of support for accession to the EU has been analysed through subjective principled expectations of benefits and harms of entry into the Union at a personal and at a national level, and through concrete expectations at the level of twenty-two aspects of social and economic life. The research results show that on the basis of principled expectations it is possible precisely to predict support for entry into the EU, but that the principled expectations are not to any very great extent founded on concrete expectations in the observed aspects of social and economic life, and that they are to a certain degree linked with political viewpoints. On the other hand, concrete expectations are relatively weakly correlated with support for Croatian entry into the EU. Such a result suggests the conclusion that on the basis of a utilitarian explanation of support it is possible only relatively poorly to predict viewpoints concerning joining the EU, and that principled expectations of benefits and harms are in good part an expression of general impressions about the EU, trust in the political elite and political views of Croatian citizens, and to a lesser extent realistic rational calculations of harms and benefits. The paper is based on empirical survey of the views and spectations performed on a probabilistic national sample of a thousand citizens older than 15.
In: Politička misao: croatian political science review = Political thought, Band 55, Heft 3, S. 82-103
ISSN: 1846-8721