Identity and Security in Former YugoslaviaAshgate, 2000 - 315 pages A clear, concise and comprehensive analysis of the concept of societal security, this groundbreaking book systematically applies the concept of societal security to the five successor states of Former Yugoslavia - Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia and Macedonia. Looking at the past and present, it studies the implications for the future. Well-researched and highly informative, this text should be required reading for those interested in ethnic studies and international relations. |
From inside the book
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Page 49
... side in Ustashi while seeing the threatening side of Chetnici , and Serbian eyes see only the good side in Chetnici and the threatening side of Ustashi . Moreover , that which one side considers as the good side in its own fighters is ...
... side in Ustashi while seeing the threatening side of Chetnici , and Serbian eyes see only the good side in Chetnici and the threatening side of Ustashi . Moreover , that which one side considers as the good side in its own fighters is ...
Page 92
... sides do not agree on the internal structure of their federal state . The Bosnian side sees the federation as a community of Bosniacs and Croats , and the Croatian side sees it as a " union of two politico - administrative entities ( of ...
... sides do not agree on the internal structure of their federal state . The Bosnian side sees the federation as a community of Bosniacs and Croats , and the Croatian side sees it as a " union of two politico - administrative entities ( of ...
Page 267
... sides of the border could unite in a bilateral one , which could engage at least Macedonia and the FRY , on one side , and Albanians from Macedonia , Kosovo and Albania , on another . It is very hard to predict which side the West would ...
... sides of the border could unite in a bilateral one , which could engage at least Macedonia and the FRY , on one side , and Albanians from Macedonia , Kosovo and Albania , on another . It is very hard to predict which side the West would ...
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Common terms and phrases
above-mentioned Albanians army authors Balkans became Belgrade Bogomils Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgarian Buzan Catholic century Communist conflict considered constitution created crisis Croatian language cultural Dayton-Paris Peace Accords democratic disintegration Eastern economic Enciklopedija Jugoslavije Encyclopaedia Britannica established ethnic groups Europe European existence fact Federation of Bosnia forces foreign German Greece Greek human rights Hungarian Hungary Illyrian independence institutions Isakovic Islam Kosovo Krajina language leaders leadership Macedonia Macedonian language majority military Milosevic minority Moslem national identity nationalist neighbouring Ole Wæver parties perceived political politicians population present-day problems refugees region relations religion religious Republika Srpska role rule sanctions Sarajevo Second World Second World War Second Yugoslavia seems Serbian Serbs and Croats side Skopje Slavic Slavonia Slovenes Slovenia social societal security South Slav territory Third Yugoslavia threatened Tito's Turkish Turks Wæver Western Yugoslav republics Yugoslav successor Zagreb
References to this book
Reflections on the Balkan Wars: Ten Years After the Break-up of Yugoslavia Jeffrey S. Morton No preview available - 2004 |