Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn more.
  • Log In
  • Register
CEEOL Logo
Advanced Search
  • Home
  • SUBJECT AREAS
  • PUBLISHERS
  • JOURNALS
  • eBooks
  • GREY LITERATURE
  • CEEOL-DIGITS
  • INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNT
  • Help
  • Contact
  • for LIBRARIANS
  • for PUBLISHERS

Content Type

Subjects

Languages

Legend

  • Journal
  • Article
  • Book
  • Chapter
  • Open Access
  • History
  • Special Historiographies:
  • Wars in Jugoslavia

We kindly inform you that, as long as the subject affiliation of our 300.000+ articles is in progress, you might get unsufficient or no results on your third level or second level search. In this case, please broaden your search criteria.

Result 481-500 of 1220
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • ...
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • ...
  • 59
  • 60
  • 61
  • Next
PRILOG PROUČAVANJU KARAKTERA USTANKA  U SRBIJI 1941. GODINE

PRILOG PROUČAVANJU KARAKTERA USTANKA U SRBIJI 1941. GODINE

Author(s): Kosta Nikolić / Language(s): Serbian Issue: 1+2/1991

The revolt against German rule, which took place in occupied Serbia in 1941, was dominated both by the bourgeois, legalistic movement, official named Jugoslovenska vojska u otadžbini’ and headed by Colonel Dragoljub Mihailovic, and by the communist NOP, whose nucleus was the Yugoslav Communist Party. The revolt gained intensity in September, compelling the German authorities in Serbia to seek the aid of the Wehrmacht. General Franz Bohme, who consequently arrived in Serbia on September 19th with the assignment of suppressing the revolt, resorted to methods of ruthless reprisal aimed at the civil population. At the same time, conflicts arising between the partisan and the chetnik movements began to surface. The variance was manifested in their opposing views regarding the struggle and in their political differences. Along with the war of liberation, the NOP simultaneously conducted a revolution - a struggle for a ruling position. The chetnik movement would not accept this and in November 1942 civil war broke out in Serbia, considerably weakening the revolt. The differences between the opposing sides were so great that they remained unresolved until the end of the war. The revolt in Serbia was crushed towards the end of November and the beginning of December 1941, with minimal German and great Serbian losses. The operation of quenching the revolt was carried out thoroughly in respect to both the NOP and the chetnik movement of D. Mihailovic.

More...
GENOCID U SREBRENICI: UDRUŽENI ZLOČINAČKI PODUHVAT

GENOCID U SREBRENICI: UDRUŽENI ZLOČINAČKI PODUHVAT

Author(s): Meldijana Arnaut Haseljić / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 8/2019

The verdicts handed down before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) confirmed the facts that proved the existence of several joint criminal enterprises committed in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the period 1992-1995, with a special emphasis on the genocide in Srebrenica,behind which is a chain of well-connected criminals organized in the system of political, military and police structures and organs of Republic of Srpska.The theoretical and practical interpretation of the joint criminal enterprise as a form of criminal responsibility which, as such, for the first time in the history of international law defined in the cases before the Hague tribunal, imposes the need to perceive the attribution of this form of responsibility, and determine how this doctrine is understood and interpreted in the context of the case law before the ICTY, but also before the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina

More...
KPJ I PITANJE VLASTI U REVOLUCIJI S POSEBNIM OSVRTOM NA ODLUKE U JAJCU

KPJ I PITANJE VLASTI U REVOLUCIJI S POSEBNIM OSVRTOM NA ODLUKE U JAJCU

Author(s): Dušan Živković / Language(s): Serbian Issue: 1+2/1984

The book is divided into three basic sections: a) the attitude of LCY regarding the problem of power from the beginning of the uprising and the development of power from 1941 to the Second Session of AVNOJ b) a review of the decisions of AVNOJ with a special consideration of the decision about organisation of the new Yugoslavia and c) the issue of the continuity of power from the uprising in 1941 till the declaration of the Republic on 29th November 1945. In the first section of the book the general views of the classics of Marxism about meaning of power in the revolution are discussed in the first place. This is followed by a short analysis of the development of the new revolutionary power, during the uprising in all Yugoslav countries, with special consideration of the specific ways of the appearance and development of power until the session of AVNOJ; in Jajce on 29th November 1943. The second section, mostly written in a polemical tone, deals with the decision of AVNOJ which proclaims that Yugoslavia is being organised on a federal and democratic principle, which grants the nationalities the right of self-determination and separation. Explaining the meaning of this decision in defense of the revolutionary heritage up to that stage, and placing it in relation of time and space, the author reviews some of the incorrect interpretations of it by certain nationalists and irredentists. The third section which deals with the continuity and development of the people's power since 1941 to 1945. All the most important actions of the highest LCY and military leadership of PLM (People’s Liberation Movement) aimed at bringing this power to effect and strengthening it on all liberated and occupied territories of Yugoslavia are listed. Aspects of the foreign affairs of this issue are particularly pointed out, as Well as the continuous efforts of contrarevolution, lead by the Royal Government in exile and their minister Draža Mihailović to balk the victory of the revolution, and the ability of the leadership of PLM to overcome these obstacles.

More...
KINESKA PROGRESIVNA ŠTAMPA О NARODNOOSLOBODILAČKOJ BORBI I REVOLUCIJI U JUGOSLAVIJI

KINESKA PROGRESIVNA ŠTAMPA О NARODNOOSLOBODILAČKOJ BORBI I REVOLUCIJI U JUGOSLAVIJI

Author(s): Ma Sipu / Language(s): Serbian Issue: 2/1983

Китайская передовая печать, в особенности коммунистическая, в течение всей войны особенное внимание посвящала Народно-освободительной борьбе народов Югославии под руководством КПЮ. Цеиними источниками информаций главным образом были передачи радиостанции „Свободная Югославия”, советские газеты и журналы, а также известия американских и британских газетных агенств. Самое большое количество напечатанных статей о югославской борьбе было опубликовано в ведущих дневниках КП Китая „Синьхуажибао” и „Джефнжибао”. В этих статьях с много дружественных симпатий и поддержек говорилось о борьбе югославских народов против фашизма. Она выделялась на первом месте в Европе и подчеркивалась как светлый пример за которым должны следить все порабощенные народы мира. Китайские газеты с радушием приветствовали большие успехи Народно-освободительной войны Югославии в битвах на реках Неретве и Сутьеске 1943 года и Второе заседание АВНОЮ и его постановления. Очень много статьей было посвящено тов. Тито, как легендарному полководцу и революционеру. Надо сказать, что китайская пресса очень хорошо поняла суть НОВ в Югославии и всю сложность событий па югославской территории. Она вполно была на стороне НОВ, одновременно осуждая поведение королевского правительства в эмиграции и предателя Дражу Михайловича. Следя за событиями в конце войны, она приветствовала основание Временного правительства Демократической Федеративной Югославии, окончательное освобождение страны и победу Народного фронта Югославии на общих выборах 1945 года.Из очерков передовой китайской пресси, читатели осознавали развитиеи суть НОВ народов Югославии.

More...
KALESIJSKI „ZLATNI LJILJANI“ I DOBITNICI RATNIH PRIZNANJA ARMIJE I MUP-A REPUBLIKE BOSNE I HERCEGOVINE

KALESIJSKI „ZLATNI LJILJANI“ I DOBITNICI RATNIH PRIZNANJA ARMIJE I MUP-A REPUBLIKE BOSNE I HERCEGOVINE

Author(s): Samir Halilović / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 11/2019

Review of: Dževad Tosunbegović, "Kalesijski „Zlatni ljiljani“ i dobitnici ratnih priznanja armije i MUP-a Republike Bosne i Hercegovine- monografija"; Review by: Samir Halilović

More...
PREZIMENA U BREZOVOM POLJU

PREZIMENA U BREZOVOM POLJU

Author(s): Osman Kavazović / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 4/2011

Prezimena u mnogim narodima, pa tako i u bošnjačkom su brojna i raznovrsna, te su nastajala u različitim političko-historijskim i društveno-ekonomskim uslovima. Protokom vremena postojalo je više različitih načina za nastajanje prezimena.

More...
Strategija zaborava − drugo lice genocida

Strategija zaborava − drugo lice genocida

Author(s): Jusuf Trbić / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 1/2016

Wrong interpretation, revising and adapting of the past to modern ideologies has a long tradition, especially in Europe - the cradle of nationalism. The basis of nationalism is redrawing the truth and production the collective consciousness, on the basis of false, reconstructed or fictitious history, which should create an alibi for new forms of authoritarian rule and unity as well as new collective identity. Organized, state policy of the new memory, actual in the period of fascism, then during Stalinist communism, has resulted in the largest horrors remembered in the history of the world. In the years after the collapse of fascism and withering away of Stalinism, mass production of false history, the nationalist consciousness based on it, covered the eastern part of Europe, where a new nationalist regimes sought support for its rule. After an historical fate, at the Balkan, after the dissolution of a stable and (compared to other socialist countries) democratic and free state, the darkness became the thickest. Slobodan Milosevic's regime was an attempt to unite "the Serbian ethnic areas", no matter what they were, and create a state for all Serbs, it decided to make radical change of history, in which everything is turned upside down. The whole common history of the Yugoslav peoples was presented as a succession series of hatred and conflict, in which the Serbs have always been the victims of others. In that way it was built falsified history, based on the myth, legends, lies and new truths, as the basis and justification for new wars. A kind of strategy of forgetfulness and the production of compatible historie, it is constructed a new model of memory, based on which the fascists and fascist supporters were rehabilitated, from the quite obvious reasons. Great Serbia could be made only by ethnic cleansing and genocide, i.e. by eliminating undesirable, especially Bosniaks, who were the main obstacle to Great Serbian plans. Therefore, the new Great Serbian ideologists have taken the whole plans and practice of the Chetnik movement from the Second World War. Rehabilitation of the former fascist was confirmed as a justify of current and industry oblivion and mass production of a new history - as a continuation of another face of genocide.

More...
Repatriation of War Orphans in Bosnia: Narratives of Nationhood and Care in Refugee Crises

Repatriation of War Orphans in Bosnia: Narratives of Nationhood and Care in Refugee Crises

Author(s): Burcu Akan Ellis / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2019

This study highlights the plight of children in state orphanages during conditions of war and its aftermath, in order to explore how state narratives trap children between contested notions of the best interests of the child, national belonging, and familial rights. This longitudinal study focuses on international media narratives covering a group of Bosnian orphans who were removed from the Bjelave orphanage in Sarajevo through a controversial German rescue mission in 1992. The orphans were provided temporary protection in Germany for five years but were repatriated to Bosnia in 1997 upon the Bosnian government’s request. In Bosnia, they were reintroduced into the national orphanage system, and eventually to the care of international NGOs. Their plight shows that narratives of care, national belonging and family rights are fundamental tools used to sustain state identities in the process of repatriation of refugees, leaving no voice or choice to the resilient children in question.

More...

Nationalist Historiographies and the Rise of Ethnocracy in Macedonia and their Consequences

Author(s): Goran Janev / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2018

Perpetual political fissures, fractures, ruptures, fragmentation, and conflict in the past three decades marked the region of South East Europe since the collapse of Yugoslavia in the 1990s reviving the Balkanization metaphor. Local politicians managed to live up to the negative stereotypes held against the Balkan people. The political reality of the Balkan, divided in as many as possible nation-states and statelets and wannabe “Great nation-states”, contributes to slow and inefficient transition to functioning democracies. Consumed by hatred, hostility, mistrust, and suspicion, bilateral and multilateral relations of the Balkan states are far from friendly and cooperative as they could and should be. This results from interrupted domination of nationalism in every Balkan country where nationalist discourse is deeply embedded and normalized in the public sphere. This is particularly present in the historiographical production. In this article I approach history not as a set of events but as object of fierce proprietary battle over the historical symbols. In Macedonia this instrumentalization of history for political purposes became acute during the past decade. The effects of this effort are measured in the recent survey and the article finishes with a commentary of those findings.

More...
“Genocide”, “Hate-Speech”, and “Peace as War”: From the Dayton peace implementation to a July 11, 2018 Srebrenica-related tweet

“Genocide”, “Hate-Speech”, and “Peace as War”: From the Dayton peace implementation to a July 11, 2018 Srebrenica-related tweet

Author(s): Dražen Pehar / Language(s): English Issue: 18/2019

This essay deals with all key responses to the tweet about the Srebrenica “genocide” Rajko Vasić published on 11 July 2018, interpreting those as a mini-model to elucidate the entire period of the Dayton peace implementation. The essay demonstrates that the international community, including primarily the US and the UK, relates to the peace implementation as a process of continuing war in Bosnia-Herzegovina by other means. “Hate speech” perspective and ICTY Genocide indictments/ verdicts are explained here as an auxiliary tool to achieve the very same purpose. Most importantly, it is argued here, and supported through a number of examples, that the issue of meaning as attributed to one’s political interlocutor, or a treaty or legislation, is preponderant in politics. Lastly, the author presents details from the UN Security Council July 8, 2015 session to illustrate the key conclusions of his analysis.

More...
Sveprisutna odsutnost nestalih u genocidu: ratne udovice i obitelji bez očeva u bosanskohercegovačkoj dijaspori

Sveprisutna odsutnost nestalih u genocidu: ratne udovice i obitelji bez očeva u bosanskohercegovačkoj dijaspori

Author(s): Hariz Halilovich / Language(s): Croatian Issue: 3/2019

This paper is based on an anthropological study investigating the impact of forced displacement, genocide, and missing persons on the social identities of surviving women, their families and local communities in Bosnia Herzegovina and the Bosnian diaspora. By the end of the 1992-95 Bosnian war, more than 100,000 had been killed and close to 40,000 individuals reported missing – some 7,000 of whom have still not been found or identified. No knowing where the body of one’s loved one is, makes the grieving process of many surviving families much harder than it would be if they had been able to bury the victims. The issues surrounding the missing and their exhumation, identification and burial are some of the lasting legacies of genocide and war in Bosnia, that still affect many individuals, especially war widows and their families, as well as the respective local communities. The gaps, absences, and open-ended temporality the missing persons left behind also impact on politics, culture and reconciliation within the broader Bosnian society and the diaspora.More than two decades after the war, in many respects, Bosnia can still be seen as an exemplar of a post-conflict society, where the progress towards achieving a just and lasting peace has been halted by unresolved issues from the past, including the issue of the missing. In regard to the missing (presumably dead), what is often depicted as an “unresolved past” is in fact an unresolved present, spread through global connections across time and space and having significant affects and effects even on those who now live at great geographic distances from the original violence.The issue of the missing in Bosnia is predominantly, but not exclusively, affecting the Muslim (Bosniak) community. Mourning the dead in Islam typically takes place in the private domain and those who died in conflict or as innocent victims are regarded as šehidi, martyrs who will be rewarded in the afterlife. However, in the case of the missing, there are no adequate religious rituals offering closure or recognising a missing person as šehid able to “resettle” (preseli) in afterlife. Instead of referring to the missing as those who now rest in peace, or literally those who “resettled ” (preselili) in the afterlife (ahiret), the common reference for the Srebrenica genocide victims in 1995 is “those who did not get across” (nisu prešli), also symbolically sug¬gesting the inability of the missing to resettle (presele), thus remaining in a state of post-mortem liminality.While coping with their own trauma, loss and displacement, many Bosnian survivors, especially women, have taken up the crucial role in identifying the remains of relatives uncovered from mass graves spread across the country. They have often literally been the embodiment of the search for and identification of the missing in more than one way. They have preserved a link between those who perished and those who survived both through their narrated and documented memories of the missing and though their bodies. In Bosnia, DNA has served as a crucial piece of information required to establish identities of the missing. DNA matching technolo¬gies have equally challenged and reinforced the importance of blood relations and blood as the “shared essence” through which kinship is defined and relations between individuals are imagined, linking not only parents and siblings in a direct blood relation, but also husbands and wives and subsequently leading to identification of other missing “non-blood” relatives. However, as anthropologist Sarah Wagner has witnessed and described, DNA evidence does not exist in a vacuum; rather, its success depends on other manifestations of individual lives, social ties, and everyday practice: family members holding a piece of cloth, touching its fabric, whose pattern and stitching are indelibly etched into their memory, use their own recollections to help retrieve their missing relatives’ remains.In the first part of the paper, statistical and historiographical facts related to the 1992- 95 war casualties in Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) are presented and the shortcomings of the quantitative research approaches in drawing conclusions about the es¬sence, character and consequences of the war events on different demographic and gender groups in BiH are pointed out.In the second part—through an ethnographic description of the life of one of the war widows and a mother who lost two sons and who now lives in the diaspora—the author describes the difficulties that accompany the war widows, both at the psychological and socio-cultural levels, as well as the reasons for many women to choose to migrate to third countries. The paper then describes how medical and forensic DNA biotechnology has helped to rehumanize the missing and killed, while the post-war bureaucracy in BiH has largely had a different, dehumanising effect on the war widows and survivors, which was often one of the reasons for their emigration.For mothers who lost children and war widows who lost husbands, it is expected that, for the rest of their lives, they will continue to perform the roles, adjusting their lives and embodying eternal grief for their loved ones. Across south-eastern Europe and the Balkans this aspect of patriarchal tradition has survived in many communities—among Christians and Muslims alike. Many women, once they lose their loved ones, spend the rest of their lives in mourning dress code. They also tend to become more religious and to perform regular rituals to honour and remember their dead. Even their everyday lives are readjusted so there are constant reminders of those they lost. Their public identities become those of mourning women. Often, they remain so for years, sometimes for the rest of their lives. These have been the unwritten rules and expectations of the women’s own communities that have been reconstructed after the war. In conclusion, the author advocates for an activist approach to socio-humanistic research related to the issues that accompany war widows, with the aim of protecting and promoting their human rights and dignity.

More...
Ein Fenster zur Welt. Osteuropa in der New York Review of Books, 1963-2003

Ein Fenster zur Welt. Osteuropa in der New York Review of Books, 1963-2003

Author(s): Victoria Harms / Language(s): German Issue: 1/2020

This article discusses the role Central Europe has played in the self-identification and positioning of New York intellectuals during and since the end of the Cold War. Through the lens of the New York Review of Books, it analyzes the rise of the human rights movement and of East European dissidents, the emerging consensus of the Holocaust as the ultimate evil, and the identification of Central Europe as a coherent but historically endangered cultural region. This contribution to the intellectual history of the Cold War focuses on the motivations and changing preferences of intellectuals and activists in New York. It relies on the published articles in the Review and interviews with participants in the East-West network discussed here. Although originally founded as a left-leaning journal that fiercely criticized the US political and intellectual establishment, the Review came to embrace classical liberalism in the 1970s. New groups of dissidents in Eastern Europe, such as the Moscow Helsinki Group, KOR, and the Charta 77, encouraged this ideological shift. They inspired the New Yorkers to rally behind the cause of human rights and opened their eyes to the tragic fate of twentieth-century Central Europe. Many in this informal network on either side of the Iron Curtain shared a family history that rooted in Jewish Eastern Europe. This alliance did not only offer the dissidents’ elusive protection through the Review’s influence on public opinion but also lent credibility to the American intellectuals involved and bolstered the perception of their political and intellectual integrity. After 1989, however, the network fell apart when much of Central Europe succumbed to ethno-nationalism. The New Yorkers focused instead on the wars in the former Yugoslavia. Eventually, friendships deteriorated over the opposing attitudes toward the US invasion of Iraq and the war on terror, in which both sides deployed the same arguments as during the Cold War but to different ends.

More...
Historiku i zhvillimit të arkivave në Kosovë nën regjimet represive

Historiku i zhvillimit të arkivave në Kosovë nën regjimet represive

Author(s): Hysen Azemi / Language(s): Albanian Issue: 1-2/2019

Archives constitute the memory of nations and societies; they form the basis of their identity and are an essential element of informing society. By testifying to the activities carried out and the decisions taken, they at the same time ensure the continuity of the bodies as well as the justification of their rights, whether individual or state. Since archives guarantee citizens' access to administrative information and to the right of peoples to know their history, they are essential to the exercise of democracy, the taking of responsibilities from public power and better governance. Archiving represents a field of social activity and includes theoretical and practical problems related to the administration of documents of various types. The activity of the archive is the receipt, preservation, regulation and processing, microfilming, digitization and publication of the records that are part of the archival collections.

More...
Inside the Serbian War Machine. The Milošević Telephone Intercepts, 1991-1992
20.00 €
Preview

Inside the Serbian War Machine. The Milošević Telephone Intercepts, 1991-1992

Author(s): Josip Glaurdić / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2009

This article examines the arguably most interesting pieces of evidence used during the trial of Slobodan Milošević at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia—more than two hundred recordings of intercepted conversations that took place in 1991 and 1992 between Milošević, Radovan Karadžić, Dobrica Ćosić, and various other protagonists on the Serbian side of the wars in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH). Analysis of the intercepts presented in this article makes several important contributions to the interpretation of events in former Yugoslavia during that period. First, it identifies the ideological foundations of Milošević-led Serbian war campaigns in the political influence of Dobrica Ćosić and his platform of “unification of Serbs.” Second, it contributes to the vigorous debate regarding the possible deal between Miloševic´ and the Croatian president Franjo Tuđman for the division of BiH. It confirms that negotiations took place, but that Miloševic´ and his associates had no intention of respecting any agreement and wanted the whole of BiH until at least late 1991. Third, it provides indications that Miloševic´ held the position of the de facto commander-in-chief in the operations of the Yugoslav People’s Army in Croatia and BiH. And fourth, it establishes that the two institutions of force Milošević had direct legal control over—Serbia’s State Security Service and Ministry of Interior—were his principal means of control over Croatian and Bosnian Serbs and instruments in the aggression against BiH even after its international recognition.

More...
Editor’s Note

Editor’s Note

Author(s): Ilya Prizel / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2007

It is not the usual practice for this journal to publish an author’s reply to reviews of his or her books. However, Professor Sabrina Ramet’s book, Thinking about Yugoslavia, is an unusual book presenting specific problems that led to this unusual treatment. [...]

More...
Moralizing about Scholarship about Yugoslavia
20.00 €
Preview

Moralizing about Scholarship about Yugoslavia

Author(s): Robert M. Hayden / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2007

The review of: Thinking about Yugoslavia: Scholarly Debates about the Yugoslav Breakup and the Wars in Bosnia and Kosovo by Sabrina P. Ramet. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

More...
Review of Ramet’s Balkan Babel
20.00 €
Preview

Review of Ramet’s Balkan Babel

Author(s): Carole Hodge / Language(s): English Issue: 04/2003

The review of: Balkan Babel, 4th ed. by Sabrina Ramet. Boulder, CO: Westview, 2002.

More...
Of Dark Sides and Twilight Zones: Enlarging to the Balkans
20.00 €
Preview

Of Dark Sides and Twilight Zones: Enlarging to the Balkans

Author(s): Alina Mungiu-Pippidi / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2003

In April 2002, the Dutch government of Wim Kok, driven by a virtuous environment minister, resigned over the 1995 failure of Dutch troops to prevent the slaughter of more than seven thousand Muslims in the small Balkan town of Srebrenica. The distance in space and time from the initial event that triggered this development to the final outcome is considerable. So is the novelty. Governments have resigned over failures in foreign policy before but never over one with no direct impact to their own security. [...]

More...
Great Britain and Macedonian Statehood and Unification 1940-49
20.00 €
Preview

Great Britain and Macedonian Statehood and Unification 1940-49

Author(s): Andrew Rossos / Language(s): English Issue: 01/2000

The declaration of independence by the Republic of Macedonia in September 1991, in the wake of the bloody disintegration of the Yugoslav federation, provoked a dangerous political and diplomatic crisis. Potentially it posed a far greater threat to Balkan and European peace and stability than the war to the north, in Slovenia, Croatia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. A war over Macedonia would have been from the very outset a much wider conflict, an international war. It would have involved not only former republics of Yugoslavia, but all of Macedonia's neighbors and possibly Turkey; and, since Greece and Turkey were bound to be on opposite sides, it would have become an armed conflict between two member countries of the NATO alliance. The crisis was the result of the determined opposition-in some cases direct and overt, in others indirect and concealed-of the neighboring Balkan states to the establishment of an independent Macedonian state. [...]

More...
A Rope Supports a Man Who Is Hanged-NATO Air Strikes and the End of Bosnian Resistance
20.00 €
Preview

A Rope Supports a Man Who Is Hanged-NATO Air Strikes and the End of Bosnian Resistance

Author(s): Attila Hoare / Language(s): English Issue: 02/1998

The Dayton settlement of November 1995 marked the end of not one but two struggles over the former Yugoslavia. The first was a struggle of armies: between the armies of the republics of Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina on the one hand, fighting for national survival and state independence, and the military forces controlled or organized by Serbia on the other, fighting to crush these republics and dismember them territorially. Although Serbia began the war in 1991 with an apparently overwhelming military superiority over its victims, on account of its control of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) and its much greater strategic and psychological preparedness, by late 1991 the Croatians, followed by the Bosnians by mid-1994, had built up armies capable of driving its forces back. By the time of the final cease-fire in October 1995, Serbian forces west of the Brcko corridor were in a state of near-complete collapse. [...]

More...
Result 481-500 of 1220
  • Prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • ...
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • ...
  • 59
  • 60
  • 61
  • Next

About

CEEOL is a leading provider of academic eJournals, eBooks and Grey Literature documents in Humanities and Social Sciences from and about Central, East and Southeast Europe. In the rapidly changing digital sphere CEEOL is a reliable source of adjusting expertise trusted by scholars, researchers, publishers, and librarians. CEEOL offers various services to subscribing institutions and their patrons to make access to its content as easy as possible. CEEOL supports publishers to reach new audiences and disseminate the scientific achievements to a broad readership worldwide. Un-affiliated scholars have the possibility to access the repository by creating their personal user account.

Contact Us

Central and Eastern European Online Library GmbH
Basaltstrasse 9
60487 Frankfurt am Main
Germany
Amtsgericht Frankfurt am Main HRB 102056
VAT number: DE300273105
Phone: +49 (0)69-20026820
Email: info@ceeol.com

Connect with CEEOL

  • Join our Facebook page
  • Follow us on Twitter
CEEOL Logo Footer
2025 © CEEOL. ALL Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions of use | Accessibility
ver2.0.428
Toggle Accessibility Mode

Login CEEOL

{{forgottenPasswordMessage.Message}}

Enter your Username (Email) below.

Institutional Login