The moral economy of home construction in late socialist Yugoslavia

Hist Anthropol Chur. 2017 Jun 26;29(2):141-162. doi: 10.1080/02757206.2017.1340279. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Housing shortages in Yugoslav cities were a perennial concern for authorities and citizens alike. They disproportionately affected Yugoslav workers who as a consequence were the demographic most likely to independently construct a family home. This article explores how informal builders justified home construction in moral terms, legitimizing it on the basis of physical labour that was invested in home construction. This was couched in both the language register of Yugoslav socialism and patriarchal custom (according to which a male-headed household should enjoy the right to a family home). Construction was also conditioned by the opportunities and constraints of late socialist temporalities.

Keywords: Socialist working class; Yugoslavia; housing; informal construction; moral economy.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) as part of the research project ‘Between class and nation: Working-class communities in 1980s Serbia and Montenegro’ [FWF: P27008].