The Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s is a well-structured and balanced volume that provides the reader with a critically written “state of the debate” on what The Economist once called the “Yugomess”. Among its biggest strengths and novelties, if compared with other introductory accounts, is the author’s insistence on not only what has been written about particular events, but also how it has been written.
Dora Komnenovic, Justus Liebig University, Germany in Croatian Political Science Review
The Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s is a well structured and balanced volume that provides the reader with a critically written ‘state of the debate’ on what The Economist once called the ‘Yugomess’. Among its biggest strengths and novelties, if compared with other introductory accounts, is the author’s insistence on not only what has been written about particular events, but also how it has been written.
Dora Komnenovic, Croatian Political Science Review, Vol. 53 (4)
Editors' Preface
1. Introduction
2. Yugoslavia and its Origins
3. The Break-Up of the Yugoslav Federation
4. From Crisis to War in Slovenia and Croatia
5. The War in Bosnia-Herzegovina
6. The Kosovo War and its Aftermath
7. Peacebuilding, Reconciliation and Reconstruction
8. The Past on Trial
9. Culture and Language During and After the Wars
10. Conclusion
Timeline (1980-2000)
Bibliography
Index.