Fragmented Solidarity? Reflections on Queer Participation in the 2024/2025 Student Protests in Serbia

Authors

  • Marija Radoman Institute for Sociological Research, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Serbia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i28.635

Keywords:

queer students; student protests; Serbia; solidarity; identity verification; social movements.

Abstract

This article examines the experiences of queer students during the 2024/2025 student protests in Serbia, with a focus on how solidarity and identity were negotiated within the broader mobilization. Drawing on eight narrative interviews with LGBTIQ+ students, the study uses concepts from the social movement and identity control theories (ICT) to analyze the interplay between political participation, recognition, and identity verification. Findings suggest that queer students experienced solidarity in fragmented ways. While the student identity emerged as a strong unifying factor, the expression of LGBTIQ+ identities was more complex. A shared student role often fostered a strong sense of belonging, but solidarity was not uniformly experienced. Although based on their sexual or gender identity within the student movement many described a strong sense of belonging, queer identities were sometimes sidelined—particularly when they were not explicitly acknowledged in protest actions, slogans, or symbols such as banners and flags. Solidarity, in this context, should not be understood as a fixed or purely political ideal—it is shaped by lived experiences and structural conditions in the Serbian society. This research is significant for exploring the position of marginalized groups within the Serbian protest movement and for informing future queer engagement in collective action.

Author Biography

Marija Radoman, Institute for Sociological Research, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Serbia

Marija Radoman is a Research Associate at the Institute for Sociological Research, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade. She earned her degree in sociology at the same faculty, where she also completed her PhD in 2019 with a dissertation on same-sex partnerships in Belgrade. Her professional background includes over a decade of research experience in the fields of gender studies, youth value orientations, LGBTIQ rights, and research methodologies. She has a strong interest in feminist and queer theory, as well as in the study of social values, with a particular focus on the rise of right-wing movements and authoritarian tendencies.

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Published

15.10.2025

How to Cite

Radoman, M. (2025). Fragmented Solidarity? Reflections on Queer Participation in the 2024/2025 Student Protests in Serbia. AM Journal of Art and Media Studies, (38). https://doi.org/10.25038/am.v0i28.635

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Section

MAIN TOPIC: Bodily Autonomy and Identity Politics: Feminist Approaches in the Era of Global Political Changes