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serbia

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Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2013) 24 (2): 59–80.
Published: 01 June 2013
...Karthika Sasikumar In 2009, citizens of Serbia were finally allowed to make short trips to Schengen zone countries without visas. This represented a victory for the regime in Belgrade. A whole generation of Serbians had been held back from European travel by the visa requirement that was introduced...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2003) 14 (1): 100–104.
Published: 01 March 2003
...Costas Melakopides Takis Michas: Unholy Alliance: Greece and Milosevic's Serbia . College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 2002. 176 pages. ISBN 1-58544-183-X. $29.95. Costas Melakopides is professor of political science, University of Cyprus. Mediterranean Affairs, Inc...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2000) 11 (3): 144–163.
Published: 01 September 2000
... Page 144 The Social Origins of Balkan Politics: Nationalism, Underdevelopment, and the Nation-State in Greece, Serbia, and Bulgaria, 1880–1920 Victor...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2000) 11 (4): 140–160.
Published: 01 December 2000
... Militarism and Ecology: NATO Ecocide in Serbia Vojin Joksimovich In the Kosovo war conducted by the United States and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization from 24 March to 10 June 1999, as in any major...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2009) 20 (4): 71–82.
Published: 01 December 2009
...Melissa McConnell Foreign policy capacity is defined as dynamic, information-based adaptation by nation-states in complex, ambiguous environments that involve their domestic systems as well as external variables. On questions of Bosnia and Kosovo, Serbia's policy capacity is weakened by lack...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2013) 24 (2): 39–58.
Published: 01 June 2013
...Peter Brock Despite the dreadful wars — and the comparable horrors of uncertain “peace” — and against the background of an almost religious knack for recurring Balkan catastrophe, there are warnings that hostilities are reviving in the former Yugoslav republics of Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2009) 20 (3): 40–50.
Published: 01 September 2009
... as a potential candidate. Since 1999 — when Serbia was compelled by massive US–led bombing An earlier version of this essay was presented on 28 January 2009 under the auspices of the Njegos Serbian Studies Endowment at the Harriman Institute, Columbia University. David Binder is a retired...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2008) 19 (4): 81–90.
Published: 01 December 2008
.... It has also begun to infect the discourse among the political parties in Serbia. David Binder is a retired correspondent for the New York Times and serves on the editorial advisory board of Mediterranean Quarterly . The author wishes to acknowledge with gratitude the advice and suggestions of Sanya...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2015) 26 (2): 115–127.
Published: 01 June 2015
... for neighboring Serbia. The bitter memory held by these Serb survivors of the Ustashe regime, in particular the refugees, constituted a subversive force throughout the period of the second Yugoslavia, culminating in the Yugoslav Wars between 1991 and 1995. Shyamal Kataria holds a PhD in political science...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2009) 20 (1): 15–30.
Published: 01 March 2009
...Doug Bandow For the past decade, the United States has been promoting national transformation in the Balkans. In pushing the independence of Kosovo, Washington policy makers apparently believed that Serbia would acquiesce, most nations would recognize the newest independent state, and Russia would...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2011) 22 (1): 1–14.
Published: 01 March 2011
... and popular accounts, as well as official US and European positions, have placed emphasis on Milosevic's machinations to build Great Serbia, yet in the Serbian narrative itself the rebirth of Islamic power in Bosnia and Kosovo proved fundamental. This essay examines both narratives and concludes with some...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2017) 28 (4): 5–13.
Published: 01 December 2017
... crimes during Kosovo’s war of secession from Serbia in the late 1990s. Those crimes included executing prisoners of war and selling their organs on an international black market.5 The surprisingly strong showing of the authoritarian leftist Movement for Self- Determination (MSD), which drew 27...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (1): 11–21.
Published: 01 March 2001
..., internecine feuds, and wars. Then there are the Balkan political earthquakes. The Yugoslav presidential elections of 24 September 2000 can be regarded as a massive political tremor, affecting not only Serbia itself, the largest and most strategically...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2006) 17 (4): 142–159.
Published: 01 December 2006
... to the medieval state of Serbia.4 Regardless of what transpired during the fourteenth century, the argument can be made that no state has ever willingly surrendered part of its territory, at least not without compensation, and Ser- bia is not an exception. In accordance with this view, the medieval kingdom...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2014) 25 (2): 61–84.
Published: 01 June 2014
... was generally “fundamentally oppor- tunistic” and had as its goal “to weaken the authority” of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the EU, and the United States. The Balkans duly served as “a convenient platform for this broader goal.”10 Moscow also utilizes every opportunity to keep Serbia from...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2007) 18 (3): 72–93.
Published: 01 September 2007
... with the seats of Vojvodina and Kosovo, two of Serbia’s autonomous provinces that he had also seized, Milosevic had four votes necessary to block whatever was proposed by the remaining four republics. It was four against four, an impassable barrier, an impossible deadlock, broken only by the devil’s...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2008) 19 (3): 6–22.
Published: 01 September 2008
... makers had repeatedly signaled their support for that outcome. Although the United Nations resolution authoriz- ing international governance of the province following NATO’s air assault in 1999 ostensibly confirmed that Kosovo remained part of Serbia, only the most naive observers doubted...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2000) 11 (2): 59–77.
Published: 01 June 2000
... rebuilt and revitalized, the interdependent economies of Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Serbia, Montenegro, and Romania will be able to offer their citizens a better future. It is hoped...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2001) 12 (3): 47–56.
Published: 01 September 2001
... Independent State of Croatia, which declared war even against the United States and other allied powers. At one time during the war, President Franklin Roosevelt suggested that Serbia should be restored but that Croatia be put under trusteeship...
Journal Article
Mediterranean Quarterly (2000) 11 (3): 62–86.
Published: 01 September 2000
.... The North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s case for declaring war on Serbia on 24 March 1999 was based squarely on the defense of human rights. Speak- ing on the evening of 24 March, when the bombing began, President Bill Clinton had this to say: President...