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  2. Women in Kosovo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Kosovo

    Women in Kosovo are technically equal to men in terms of the right to voting, property rights, and work. However, less than 10 percent of all businesses in Kosovo are led or owned by women and less than 3 percent of all business loans go to women. [6] This is partly due to the fact that women do not own the collateral needed to secure loans ...

  3. Flora Brovina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flora_Brovina

    Succeeded by. Kadri Veseli. Flora Brovina (born 30 September 1949) is a Kosovar Albanian poet, pediatrician and women's rights activist. She was born in the town of Skenderaj in the Drenica Valley of Kosovo, and was raised in Pristina, where she went to school and began studying medicine. After finishing her university studies in Zagreb, where ...

  4. Kosovar civil society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovar_civil_society

    Kosovar civil society has had many incarnations since the early 1990s. It is a product of the occupation of the Kosovo province by the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia through 1999, then expanded when the Republic of Kosovo was under UNMIK and KFOR control, and now how it has evolved since the unilateral declaration of independence on February 17, 2008.

  5. Atifete Jahjaga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atifete_Jahjaga

    Atifete Jahjaga (Albanian pronunciation: [atiˈfɛːtɛ jahˈjaːɡa]; born 20 April 1975) is a Kosovar Albanian politician who served as the third President of Kosovo.She was the first female President of the Republic of Kosovo, the first non-partisan candidate and the youngest female head of state to be elected to the top office.

  6. War crimes in the Kosovo War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_crimes_in_the_Kosovo_War

    Widespread rape and sexual violence occurred during the conflict and the majority of victims were Kosovo Albanian women. In 2000, Human Rights Watch documented 96 cases while adding that "it is likely that the number is much higher". Years after the war, the figure put forward for the number of rape victims was 10,000–20,000.

  7. Kosovo women's national football team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo_women's_national...

    The Kosovan women's national football team wears blue jersey at home matches, white jersey at away matches, black jersey at neutral matches, but mostly this jersey is used as an alternative jersey, following the tradition of the Kosovo men's team. On 5 October 2016, Kosovo signed with Spanish sportswear company Kelme to a four-year contract and ...

  8. Balkan sworn virgins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balkan_sworn_virgins

    Balkan sworn virgins (in Albanian: burrnesha) are people who are assigned female at birth and who take a vow of chastity and live as men in patriarchal northern Albanian society, Kosovo and Montenegro. To a lesser extent, the practice exists, or has existed, in other parts of the western Balkans, including Bosnia, Dalmatia (Croatia), Serbia and ...

  9. Women's Football Superleague of Kosovo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_Football...

    History. The league was founded in 2010 under the name Kosovo Women's Football League (Albanian: Liga e Futbollit për Femra të Kosovës), a name it kept until August 2022, when the Football Federation of Kosovo decided to change the organizational structure of women's football competitions in Kosovo, where from this change, the name was changed to the Women's Football Superleague of Kosovo ...