Identity and Security in Former YugoslaviaRoutledge, 2019 M05 24 - 326 pages This title was first published in 2000. 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. Looking at the past and present, it studies the implications for the future. |
From inside the book
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Page 9
... rule saying that the more one argues that a conflict is in terms of societal security, the more civilians are targets. A series of ethnonational movements appeared in Western Europe in the late 1960s and early 1970s fulfilling three ...
... rule saying that the more one argues that a conflict is in terms of societal security, the more civilians are targets. A series of ethnonational movements appeared in Western Europe in the late 1960s and early 1970s fulfilling three ...
Page 16
... rule. During the next two centuries, Bavarians and Magyars assimilated Alpine Slavs who were populating parts of presentday Austria and western Hungary. The Slovene boundaries were thus narrowed to the South, but a Slovene tribal duchy ...
... rule. During the next two centuries, Bavarians and Magyars assimilated Alpine Slavs who were populating parts of presentday Austria and western Hungary. The Slovene boundaries were thus narrowed to the South, but a Slovene tribal duchy ...
Page 18
... rule. Secondly, during the rule of Napoleon I most of the Slovene lands became parts of the Illyrian provinces. Third, the base of the Habsburg rule was an own bureaucracy which was sharing power with local aristocracy. Thanks to the ...
... rule. Secondly, during the rule of Napoleon I most of the Slovene lands became parts of the Illyrian provinces. Third, the base of the Habsburg rule was an own bureaucracy which was sharing power with local aristocracy. Thanks to the ...
Page 20
... rules for interaction had permitted the actors in Yugoslavia to operate “pretty much like the European balance-of-power system of the nineteenth century”. Coalitions were issue-related and shifting rather than ideological and permanent ...
... rules for interaction had permitted the actors in Yugoslavia to operate “pretty much like the European balance-of-power system of the nineteenth century”. Coalitions were issue-related and shifting rather than ideological and permanent ...
Page 28
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Contents
1 | |
16 | |
3 Croatia | 34 |
4 Bosnia and Herzegovina | 75 |
5 Yugoslavia | 112 |
6 Macedonia | 192 |
7 Conclusions and outlook for the future | 222 |
Notes | 276 |
Bibliography | 292 |
Index | 311 |
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Common terms and phrases
above-mentioned Albanians army authors Balkan became Belgrade Bogomils Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgarian Buzan Catholic century Communist conflict considered constitution created crisis Croatian language cultural Dalmatia Dayton-Paris Peace Accords democratic disintegration Eastern economic Enciklopedija Jugoslavije Encyclopaedia Britannica established ethnic groups Europe European existence fact Federation of Bosnia forces German Greece Greek Hungarian Hungary Illyrian independence Isakovic Islam Kosovo Krajina language leaders leadership Macedonia Macedonian language majority military Milosevic minority modem Moslem national identity nationalist neighbouring Orthodox Church parties perceived political politicians population present-day problems refugees region relations religion religious Republika Srpska role rule sanctions Second World Second World War Second Yugoslavia seems Serbs and Croats side Skopje Slavic Slavonia Slovene language Slovenes Slovenia social societal security South Slav sovereignty territory Third Yugoslavia threatened Tito’s traditions Turkish Turks wars Western Yugoslav republics Yugoslav successor Zagreb