Boh was born in a wealthy
middle class family in
Ljubljana,
Kingdom of Yugoslavia (now the capital of Slovenia). Her father was an
Austrian Jew that had converted to
Roman Catholicism, and her mother was
Slovene. During
World War II, she was imprisoned by the
Nazis. In 1946 she became engaged to
Ljubo Sirc, who later became an
economist. The same year, however, Sirc was imprisoned by the
communist regime and tried in the
Nagode Trial. Due to Sirc's long confinement and later exile, their engagement failed. She had two stepchildren (Maja and Ali Boh) and a daughter Katja Boh-Cerjak from her marriage to Dr. Boh. She studied sociology at the
University of Ljubljana and obtained her PhD in 1974. She dedicated herself to the study of
family patterns, becoming one of the leading
European experts in the field. ==Involvement in politics==