
STATE CAPTURE
What conditions are conducive to state capture? Who are the main actors and what are the main mechanisms of state capture in the security sector? To what extent have individual security sector institutions been captured? What narratives are used to justify state capture? How can the trend of state capture be reversed?
RELATED

Date: 22.06.2021.
Author: Belgrade Centre for Security Policy
How did statements of officials and the official policy of Serbia towards the pandemic influence the reduction of individual freedoms and rights, and the undemocratic behavior of the government was the subject of an online discussion organized by the BCSP on June 15, 2021.

Date: 14.06.2021.
Author: Jelena Pejić Nikić | Srđan Hercigonja |
How did the crisis management of the coronavirus pandemic led to the "covidocracy" – continuation of capturing the state? Find out in the latest BCBP analysis.

Date: 31.05.2021.
Author: Maja Bjeloš | Bojan Elek |
Based on an analysis of top officials’ speeches, this text will show how officially promoted narratives about Kosovo serve to capture the state.

Date: 31.03.2021.
Author: Marija Pavlović | Bojan Elek | Miloš Jovanović |
How the narrative of the fight against organised crime is used to capture the state? Find out in the latest BCSP analysis.

Date: 15.03.2021.
Author: Belgrade Centre for Security Policy
On the occasion of the open call for physical violence by the Member of the National Assembly, Aleksandar Martinović, civil society organizations gathered in National Convention on the European Union working groups for Chapters 23 and 24 and cross-sectoral groups for political criteria and freedom of expression and the media demand a reaction from the President of the National Assembly from the position of Chairman of the Committee on Administrative, Budgetary, Mandate and Immunity Issues.

Date: 10.03.2021.
Author: Luka Šterić |
How narratives about foreign direct investments contribute to the state capture – find out in the latest publication written by BCSP Researcher Luka Šterić.

Date: 16.12.2020.
Author: Belgrade Centre for Security Policy
We hereby express our dissatisfaction with the lack of reforms that the Government of Serbia has accepted to implement in the EU accession process, the deterioration of respect for democratic principles and the rule of law, the presence of hate speech and the increase in violence against individuals, journalists, media, those who do not share views of the current political establishment and civil society organizations, which are guaranteed by the Constitution and laws of the Republic of Serbia, who present critical views of the work and results of state institutions and bodies.

Date: 18.11.2020.
Author: Predrag Petrović |
Are institutions and politicians really working for the public interest? How is corruption perceived in Serbia? Are citizens ready to support activist initiatives? You can read what citizens think about these and other issues in the latest BCSP analysis.

Date: 18.06.2020.
Author: Belgrade Centre for Security Policy
The smear campaign against BCSP and the targeting of our researchers and members of the BCSP Executive Board are just another example of the increasingly hostile political environment in which civil society organizations operate in Serbia.



