She studied film and television production in South Africa, earned a degree from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law, has been a co-ordinator of legal and educational programs at the Fond Centar za demokratiju, and has worked for the marketing agency Idols & Friends since 1996.
[8] The party won 102 seats and ultimately emerged at the leadership of a new coalition government; Marjanović again served as part of its parliamentary majority.
She resigned from the assembly on April 12, 2011, upon being appointed to the Belgrade city council (i.e., the executive wing of the municipal government), and was replaced by Ljiljana Lučić.
[9][10] Serbia's electoral system was reformed in 2011, such that parliamentary mandates were awarded in numerical order to candidates on successful lists.
Marjanović received the forty-fifth position on the Democratic Party's Choice for a Better Life alliance in the 2012 parliamentary election and was returned to the assembly when the list won sixty-seven mandates.