ABSTRACT

The text considers the possibility of establishing and maintaining alternative communities, taking as an example the Women’s Peace Coalition between the Kosovo Women’s Network and the Serbian Women in Black network. The principal question put forward is whether communities that surpass identitarian belonging are possible and how these communities relate to ‘communities’ determined territorially and nationally, as well as how they relate to artificial and symbolic supranational bodies. The main aim is the examination of the political potential of a community that wishes to be grounded on the logic of peace and the rejection of the logic of possession (following the slogan “people, not territories”). A community of women activists in the shape of the Women’s Peace Coalition is defined as a community of the dispossessed, a term developed following the work of Judith Butler and Athena Athanasiou.