We visited Edina Salihovic at her home in Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia on 16 April 2012. She had just returned from her shift at the local supermarket where she started working a couple of weeks ago as a sales assistant. She had spent about three years working exclusively from home. She has used her third loan from Women for Women International mainly to buy seeds, plough and prepare the land for spring sowing. She has about 5,000 square metres of land about twenty minutes from her home. She will grow maize, wheat and some vegetables. Some of the maize is for her chickens which she rears and sells. We saw some chicks that she was keeping at home. It was still cold and wet outside and they were being kept heated indoors. Once the weather improves she allows them to roam freely outside. She buys the chicks already vaccinated and sells them for their meat at 6 KM (around £2.30) per kilogram after about 45 days usually. Edina has two young children, one of whom goes to school, who are now looked after by her mother during the time she is working at the supermarket – her husband works as policeman. Edina and her husband had bought land and constructed their home themselves after returning to the area following the Bosnian war.