- ホーム
- > 電子洋書
Description
First Published in 1996. In identifying the causes of such a national and international failure in conflict management, The South Slav Conflict becomes a valuable case study in comparative politics and international relations. Edited by Raju G .C . Thomas and H. Richard Frim and, is unique among these by virtue of its thoroughly interdisciplinary approach to the causes and consequences of the war. The book’s great strength begins with its forthright assertion that no serious attempt to explain the current cycle of genocide and revenge among Serbs, Croats, and Bosnians can avoid the inherent complexity of the factors that transform ed Yugoslavia from one of the most pluralist of European communist states into a theater of human misery.
Table of Contents
PART I: HISTORY, RELIGION, ETHNICITY, AND NATIONALISM 1 History, Religion, and National Identity 2 The Future of History in the Balkans 3 Echoes of Another Christendom 4 Contemporary Roman Catholic-Muslim Relations 5 Hellenism and the Greek-Macedonian Affair 6 Balkan Myths and Bosnian Massacres 7 Failure and Fantasy in the Yugoslav Successor States 8 Regional Economic Nationalism in the Former Yugoslavia PART II: WAR, THE GREAT POWERS, AND INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS 9 Nations, States, and War 10 Yugoslavia and the Internationalization of the Balkan Conflict 11 U.S. Policy Towards Yugoslavia: From Differentiation to Disintegration 12 Debating Operation Quagmire Storm: U.S. Crisis Management in Bosnia 13 The United States, International Organizations, and the Yugoslav Crisis 14 Germany and the Breakup of Yugoslavia 15 War Crimes in the Balkans: Media Manipulation, Historical Amnesia, and Subjective Morality 16 Balkan Realities and the Constitution of a Poly ethnic State 17 The Tragedy in Yugoslavia Could Have Been Averted.



