Beyond protest: Can Serbia’s student movement spark a political breakthrough?
It is now three months since the November 1 Novi Sad tragedy, when a concrete canopy collapsed on the recently renovated railway station, resulting in the deaths of 15 people. This disaster, perceived as the result of government corruption and negligence, ignited public outrage, particularly among students. Initial protests took place in Novi Sad, where the opposition was visibly present and vocal. However, as the movement gained momentum, student-led protests emerged in Novi Sad, Belgrade and other large cities, increasingly distancing themselves from the ruling party and opposition.
The countryside, which remains the political stronghold of the ruling regime, has largely remained silent. This geographic divide is no coincidence — while protests erupted in urban centers, the ruling party strategically organized a mass rally of support on January 24 in Jagodina, a town of just 35,000 people deep in Serbia and far from major cities. This reflects a deliberate effort to maintain control over rural constituencies while avoiding the volatile urban centers where dissent is strongest.
The scale of the protests has been substantial. The New Year's Eve rally in Slavija, Belgrade, had an estimated 100,000 participants (including my own children), making it the largest protest since October 5, 2000 that saw the Slobodan Milošević government fall. The blockade of Autokmanda, one of the largest traffic junctions in Belgrade, at the end of January lasted 24 hours and drew 16,750 participants according to official estimates. Opposition sources claim much higher figures, some going as far as half a million across various protest sites.
Vladimir Lenin’s theory of spontaneity and organization provides a useful framework for understanding why these protests, despite their scale, have not yet translated into a broader revolutionary movement. In What Is to Be Done?, Lenin (1902) argues that spontaneous movements, unless channeled through a structured revolutionary force, tend to dissipate without fundamentally challenging the ruling order. The Serbian protests exhibit many characteristics of spontaneity, with substantive but limited mass participation and no clear leadership or organization capable of linking their demands to a broader class struggle.
Lenin’s criteria for a revolutionary situation — a ruling class unable to govern as before, an oppressed class unwilling to accept the status quo, and a rise in mass political activity — are only partially met in Serbia. While discontent is evident, the ruling class remains in control and no organized revolutionary force has emerged to direct this discontent toward systemic change. However, the presence of systemic contradictions — widespread frustration with corruption, economic inequality, and the failure of political representation — suggests that the conditions for deeper ruptures are maturing. As Lenin emphasized, a regime cannot be overthrown until it is ready to fall. That moment requires not just widespread grievances but the weakening of the ruling class and the political organization necessary to seize the opportunity. The student protests, while not revolutionary in themselves, are significant in that they expose and deepen the fractures within Serbian capitalism, potentially laying the groundwork for more profound political shifts in the future.
Students as the leading force: Contradictions and historical parallels
Unlike the anti-Milošević protests of 1996-97 and 2000, which were primarily middle-class revolts against electoral fraud and authoritarian governance, the current protests place students at the forefront of public dissatisfaction. This development is significant as it highlights the inability of traditional working-class movements to assume leadership in social struggles, a phenomenon characteristic of peripheral capitalism where labor remains fragmented and depoliticized.
Antonio Gramsci’s concept of hegemony is useful in explaining why socialist ideas remain largely absent from these protests. The neoliberal hegemony that has dominated Serbian political and economic discourse since the collapse of Yugoslavia has effectively marginalized socialist alternatives. Decades of ideological dominance have shaped public consciousness, making capitalism appear as the only viable economic system. This aligns with Michael G Kraft’s analysis (2015), where he describes how the discrediting of socialism after Yugoslavia’s collapse has hindered the emergence of full-scale anti-capitalist demands within protest movements. He notes that while protests frequently challenge corruption, austerity and privatization, they rarely articulate a systematic critique of capitalism itself.
While previous movements were directly tied to broader political shifts — challenging the Milošević regime and later the post-Milošević elite — today’s protests stem from unresolved systemic crises. The absence of working-class leadership demonstrates how neoliberal restructuring, including deindustrialization and the erosion of unions, has weakened labor’s political agency. However, in the context of working-class atomization in the private sector, public sector trade unions have emerged as a more organized force. They successfully extracted significant concessions from the government through a collective agreement signed at the end of January, improving the financial situation of educational workers (and ending their strike). This suggests that while traditional labor movements have been weakened, certain segments of the working class still retain bargaining power.
Larger trade unions, however, have distanced themselves from calls for a general strike, reflecting both structural and political constraints. While public sector unions benefit from centralized organization under state ministries, private sector unions are highly fragmented, operating across disconnected enterprises with weaker legal protections. More significantly, Serbia’s dominant clientelist economic structure ensures that many politically connected businesses — and their employees — are indirectly dependent on the ruling regime for subsidies, contracts and economic stability. This creates a situation where large sections of the working class, particularly in the private sector, are reluctant to mobilize against a government that sustains their precarious economic conditions.
Beyond these economic dependencies, ideological and political factors also explain the working class’s limited opposition to the regime. President Aleksandar Vučić’s populist government leans to the right of the political spectrum, a positioning that resonates with large segments of the Serbian working class, particularly blue-collar workers, farmers, pensioners, and other traditionally conservative groups. A December 2024 NSPM public opinion poll demonstrates a stark age difference, as the share of those who support the student protests drops precipitously from 95.5% in the 18-30 age group to 22% among those above 60. The broader European trend of the median voter shifting rightward has also played a role, reinforcing a political climate in which leftist opposition struggles to gain traction. For many working-class voters, Vučić’s regime — despite its neoliberal economic policies — offers a combination of nationalist rhetoric, paternalistic welfare measures, and political stability that they perceive as preferable to the perceived instability of opposition forces. In this context, labor militancy is further discouraged not only by economic constraints but by the ideological alignment between the ruling party and large sections of the working-class electorate.
The absence of working-class leadership demonstrates how neoliberal restructuring, including deindustrialization and the erosion of unions, has weakened labor’s political agency. However, this vacuum is not necessarily being filled by traditional political parties. Boris Kagarlitsky (2007) argues that parties have increasingly lost their ability to channel popular discontent, with mass movements emerging as the primary agents of political change. This reality is not lost on the ruling regime. The recent rally in Jagodina, where the government-backed movement for the “nation and the state” was introduced, represents an attempt to preemptively absorb public dissatisfaction outside party structures by establishing a broad populist front loyal to the state.
The students, often depicted as an apolitical force, have become the only coherent bloc capable of mobilizing discontent. However, their position remains fragile, given their limited direct engagement with production and economic leverage compared to workers. Their prominence in the protests reflects not only their discontent with the existing system but the broader political vacuum created by the inability of traditional working-class movements to assume a leading role.
Distancing from political parties: The opposition's crisis
A particularly striking aspect of the protests is the students’ intentional distancing from both the ruling coalition and opposition. While avoiding association with Vučić’s regime is expected, the reluctance to engage with opposition parties signals a broader crisis of political representation. This phenomenon aligns with Kagarlitsky’s argument in The Long Retreat (2024): the systemic inability of left and opposition forces to provide meaningful alternatives to neoliberal hegemony results in social movements operating in a political vacuum.
Neoliberal hegemony in Serbia — characterized by austerity, privatization, the weakening of social safety nets and the erosion of labor rights — has effectively depoliticized economic grievances. Decades of neoliberal restructuring have transformed the political landscape, ensuring that no significant force within the establishment challenges the fundamental logic of the market. This is particularly evident in the complete absence of genuinely socialist or social-democratic parties in parliament. The Socialist Party of Serbia (SPS), nominally the successor to the League of Communists of Serbia, has long abandoned any socialist platform, integrating itself into the ruling neoliberal coalition.
Meanwhile, the parliamentary opposition consists largely of pro-European democratic parties whose economic agenda is nearly indistinguishable from that of the ruling party. As Kagarlitsky (2007) noted, modern social-democratic parties have become so deeply imbued with the ideology of neoliberalism and “monetarism,” that today they defend the principles of neoliberalism even more decisively and consistently than traditional right-wing parties, which, due to their pragmatism, are sometimes willing to make certain compromises.
The result is a political system where neoliberalism is uncontested and the political spectrum is reduced to a competition over administration rather than ideology. Serbia’s position as a semi-peripheral country exacerbates this challenge even further. Samir Amin (1976) argued that semi-peripheral economies, unlike peripheral ones, often operate under the illusion that they can maneuver within the global economic system to achieve independent development. However, their structural dependence on global financial and trade networks makes it nearly impossible to break away from neoliberal frameworks. In Serbia’s case, this dependency manifests in the student protests’ rejection of the ruling elite and the EU, while lacking a clear alternative. The dominant discourse has conditioned the population to see capitalism — albeit a “reformed” version — as the only viable model, which limits the potential for systemic change.
At the same time, the absence of a significant leftist or labor movement further isolates student protests from broader social struggles. While neoliberal restructuring has weakened organized labor and entrenched economic dependency, limiting workers’ ability to mobilize, the student movement has failed to frame its grievances in a way that could build alliances with labor. This echoes Volodymyr Ishchenko’s critique in Towards the Abyss (2024): post-Soviet protest movements, when detached from substantive class politics, become cyclically ineffective, ultimately reproducing elite rule rather than challenging it.
Specific grievances over political demands: A deliberate or structural weakness?
Unlike the protests in 1996-97 and 2000, which were explicitly anti-regime, today’s movement refrains from making calls for the resignation of the president or the government, despite the latter already occurring. Instead, students have focused on specific demands: bringing those responsible for the Novi Sad tragedy to justice, releasing arrested students and punishing those responsible for violence against them, and raising the educational budget.
The ambiguity of these demands is not merely a strategic choice but a reflection of the political immaturity of the student movement. Jana Baćević (2015) points out that student movements in the region have often remained “inarticulate” and “vague,” even if posing substantial challenges to the ruling class. Marxist analysis suggests students — particularly those on the path to joining the professional class — often struggle to articulate broader class interests due to their own class positioning. While students may serve as a radicalizing force at moments of crisis, they do not inherently represent the working class or the broader masses. As Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels noted in The German Ideology, the ruling ideas of any age are those of the ruling class, and the future professional class is often shaped by its aspirations to integrate into the existing structures of power rather than dismantle them. This explains why student movements frequently articulate demands in ways that remain within the bounds of reform rather than revolutionary transformation.
The government has skillfully exploited this ambiguity to its advantage. By selectively addressing certain protester demands, such as adjusting budget allocations or releasing detainees in limited numbers, it can claim to have fulfilled the students’ requests while avoiding deeper structural concessions. At the same time, the regime uses this lack of clear ideological articulation to discredit the movement, portraying it as incoherent, elitist, or driven by narrow self-interest rather than a genuine struggle for social justice. This dynamic, where protests are contained by their own limited political scope, mirrors what Ishchenko (2024) describes as the cyclical ineffectiveness of post-Soviet protest movements, which, when lacking a clear class perspective, ultimately fail to challenge the ruling order and simply hand power from one group of capitalists to another.
While the student movement demonstrates an important rupture with Serbia’s dominant political forces, its limitations in articulating a cohesive, class-based critique render it vulnerable to both state co-optation and public disengagement. Without a broader coalition linking student grievances to working-class struggles, the movement risks being neutralized through partial concessions and vilification, rather than posing a sustained challenge to the system.
Rejection of international political symbols: A unique post-socialist case
A particularly notable aspect of the protests is their rejection of international political affiliations, a stark contrast to recent movements in Moldova, Georgia and other post-socialist countries, where the display of European Union flags has been a common feature. However, it would be a mistake to interpret the opposition to EU symbols as an expression of anti-European sentiment. Rather, this reflects the pro-Serbian, national character of the protests, which emphasize domestic grievances over geopolitical alignments.
The dominant iconography of the movement — blood-red handprints, Serbian national flags, faculty insignia, and banners memorializing the victims — signals that this is a protest rooted in academic and civic outrage over the Novi Sad tragedy, not a foreign-sponsored political movement. By avoiding international symbols, the students deny the government an easy opportunity to discredit the protests as externally orchestrated — a common tactic used by the regime to delegitimize opposition. At the same time, it reflects the ambiguous and increasingly disillusioned attitude toward the EU, particularly among Serbian youth.
Many no longer see the EU as an impartial arbiter, but rather as a supporter and enabler of Vučić’s regime and, by extension, an accomplice to the conditions that led to the tragic accident in Novi Sad. Over the years, the EU has maintained a pragmatic, if not complicit, relationship with Vučić, tolerating his authoritarian tendencies in exchange for political stability and alignment with Western strategic interests. This perception of the EU as a guarantor of the very system that students are protesting against has further alienated many from traditional pro-European narratives.
Serbian students certainly see themselves as part of Europe culturally and historically, but they do not necessarily identify with the EU’s political and bureaucratic institutions. Serbia’s accession process, which has stalled for years (no new negotiation chapters have been opened since 2021), has fueled frustration rather than enthusiasm. The EU’s frequent demands for political and economic reforms, coupled with its perceived double standards in regional geopolitics, have contributed to skepticism about its role as a genuinely democratic force. A February 2024 NSPM poll revealed that support for joining the EU had fallen to 42.8%, with 36.8% opposed — a sharp decline from 75% support in 2006. In this sense, the rejection of EU symbols is less about opposition to Europe and more about discontent with Serbia’s semi-peripheral position within global capitalism, where it remains politically subordinate and economically dependent on European capital.
This aligns with a broader world-systems perspective: Serbian students, even if not explicitly anti-EU, are rejecting the notion that their country’s future is dependent on integration into a system that has treated it as a periphery for decades. Their refusal to adopt the typical pro-Western protest aesthetic suggests a more complex political reality — one in which neither alignment with the EU nor the ruling elite’s pseudo-sovereigntist rhetoric provides a genuine solution to Serbia’s ongoing economic and political crises.
A protest without a movement
The Serbian student protests expose deep contradictions within the country’s political and economic system, yet they remain isolated from broader working-class struggles and lack a clear ideological direction. Their emergence signals a crisis of political representation, where neither the ruling elite nor the opposition offers a credible alternative. However, without the ability to mobilize beyond student circles or link their demands to a systemic critique of neoliberal capitalism, their transformative potential remains limited.
Popular disillusionment with the incumbent regime has not yet crystallized into an alternative vision. A significant share of the population still supports the regime. The most recent opinion polls show that the protests have not significantly changed the balance of political forces: more than 50% still support the ruling coalition whereas support for the best-performing opposition party is less than 6%. Support for Vučić, including undecided voters, continues to hover at about 50%.
As previously discussed, Lenin’s criteria for revolution are not yet met, but these protests do signal emerging tensions that could contribute to a crisis in the future. While systemic contradictions are increasingly apparent, they have not yet translated into a situation where the ruling class is weakened to the point of collapse or where a revolutionary force can capitalize on this instability. The structural barriers that prevent mass mobilization — ranging from economic dependence to political clientelism — ensure that dissatisfaction remains contained within a system that neutralizes opposition through selective concessions and repression.
The situation remains fluid and unpredictable. Yet, unless the protests evolve into a broader movement capable of linking social and economic struggles, they risk fading into a familiar cycle of resistance that disrupts but does not fundamentally challenge the system. More critically, as Gramsci warned, moments of crisis — when traditional parties lose legitimacy — do not necessarily lead to progressive outcomes. If no coherent political force emerges to articulate an alternative vision in class terms, the vacuum could be filled by reactionary movements, nationalist projects or authoritarian consolidation. Serbia faces a similar risk: in the absence of a clear leftist alternative, today’s protests may not only fail to resolve the country’s deeper contradictions but could inadvertently create openings for forces that reinforce, rather than challenge, the existing order.
In this sense, the broad and seemingly universal nature of the protests’ demands — functioning institutions, social justice and fairness — may be masking deeper contradictions within Serbian society. The opposition assumes that the real choices will be made only after Vučić’s departure. But what if the divide over Vučić has only served to obscure Serbia’s more fundamental dilemmas? As one keen observer noted, attitudes toward US President Donald Trump, the EU, and Russian President Vladimir Putin shape every opposition projection, yet these issues remain largely unspoken.
Just as critically, the protests sidestep Serbia’s internal contradictions — the progressive commodification of life, the entrenchment of neoliberalism, and the erosion of social protections. By not formulating these issues clearly, or by subsuming them under a vague discourse of justice and fairness, the students risk postponing a necessary reckoning with the nature of Serbian capitalism itself.