Abstract The digitization of cultural heritage in Kosovo is examined as both a technical preservation process and a political act that shapes collective memory and identity. Through the lens of mediated cultural memory theory, this article argues that digitization determines which memories gain visibility and how they circulate within European and global frameworks. The study positions Kosovo as operating at the “margins of memory” – geographically peripheral to Europe, institutionally dependent on external funding, and navigating contested narratives of identity in a post-conflict landscape. The analysis centers on two contrasting case studies: Oral History Kosovo, a grassroots multilingual digital archive documenting personal narratives and marginalized voices, and the Digital Cultural Heritage Database of Kosovo, a state platform cataloging officially recognized heritage sites sponsored by external funds. These initiatives reveal divergent pathways for digital memory production – one embodying bottom-up, community-driven archiving practices, the other reflecting top-down institutional digitization constrained by funding cycles and policy gaps. It demonstrates that Kosovo’s digital heritage initiatives are shaped as much by external governance logics as local priorities, with European Union funding mechanisms and international development agencies playing outsized roles. This dependency creates sustainability challenges, as projects often lack long-term maintenance once donor funding concludes. The study reveals critical infrastructure gaps, including absent legal frameworks, limited institutional coordination, and inadequate digital preservation policies. By situating Kosovo’s experience within broader debates about Europeanization, memory politics, and digital infrastructure, this article contributes to understanding how marginalized societies negotiate cultural memory in the digital age.
Qendresa Ajeti (Mon,) studied this question.