1-20 of 63 Search Results for

bosnia

Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (1): 31–37.
Published: 01 March 2000
... . Bosnia 2000 Phoenix or Flames? Peter W. Singer The Dayton Peace Agreement was intended completely decimated by cannon fire and to signify a break with the usual pattern of was now rebuilt. Balkan history, where war begets war. In However, Bosnia is not yet set...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 18 (2): 43–53.
Published: 01 June 2001
... in Politics. Bosnia in Fear and Hope D onald W . Shriver, Jr. In the depth of their hearts, in that true and in his history of the Bosnian war. “You ultimate depth which is revealed to no one, could find, on virtually the same block, a there remained the memory of what...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2003) 20 (2): 87–93.
Published: 01 June 2003
... oped as a result of previous peace-building dation for a EU-compatible free-market experiences, especially in Bosnia and Herze­ economy through privatization. K for, govina. In Kosovo, we have learned still whose personnel now number 23,500 (down more, giving us reason to hope that future...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (1): 57–63.
Published: 01 March 2000
... not just to other ethnic groups within istic and ethnocentric. Force was not neces­ the former Yugoslavia, but also to the Serbs sarily seen as a last resort, centralized con­ themselves. Large areas of Croatia, Bosnia trol was viewed as a prerequisite, and con­ and Herzegovina, and Kosovo— where Ser­...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (2): 106–108.
Published: 01 June 2002
... President Bush’s unusual decision to “unsign” the treaty creating the International Criminal Court. That was followed by an unsettling and peculiar American threat to scut­ tle United Nations peacekeepers in Bosnia unless U.S. soldiers were granted immunity from prosecution by the new...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2005) 22 (3): 113–125.
Published: 01 September 2005
... of efforts to basic industry, thereby setting the stage for demonstrate NATO resolve and bring a cease­ strikes and unrest. But Clements’s funding fire to the conflict in Bosnia. It was also a has ended, and he expects his new assign­ proving ground where President Clinton’s ment will take him...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 17 (4): 89.
Published: 01 December 2001
...; “President Gore’s Foreign Policy" (XVIL2) Guerrillas, and Colombia’s New Violencid” (XVII:3) Howe, Marvine; "Morocco’s Democratic Experience” (XVII: 1) Singer, Peter W.; “Bosnia 2000: Phoenix or Flames?” (XVII: 1) Iatrides, John O., and Nicholas...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (3): 25–32.
Published: 01 September 2000
... supposed, in response to ated once again by Milosevic. And, as in the NATO bombing, that the Milosevic gov­ Bosnia, there was also—beyond the ques­ ernment began drawing up its plans for tion of racism—something of the “man Operation Horseshoe, which envisioned bites dog” quality about a refugee...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 18 (4): 107.
Published: 01 December 2002
...; "Humanitarian Intervention: Getting Past Rieff, David; "Suffering and Cynicism in Burundi” (XVIIL3) the Reefs" (XVIII: 2) Shriver, Donald W., Jr.; “Bosnia in Fear and Hope” (XVIII:2) Daws, Sam, David Rieff, and Shashi...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (2): 39–47.
Published: 01 June 2000
...David Rieff D a v id R ie ff is deputy ed ito r o f World Policy Journal. H e is the a u th o r o f Slaughterhouse: Bosnia and the Failure of the West a n d the co-editor o f Crimes o f War: W hat the Public Should Know. The Crusaders Moral Principles, Strategic...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 21 (1): 41–49.
Published: 01 March 2004
... post-coup aid to Haiti fell be­ nomic reforms. Not to have done so would low levels needed in postconflict situations. have been to risk the precious foreign aid “Per capita, Bosnia received five times more that was absolutely vital to the recovery of a postconflict reconstruction assistance from...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 18 (2): 21–30.
Published: 01 June 2001
... versus in the new Bush administration— that an longer-term development. If more lives can examination of the interventions in Haiti, be saved in other parts of the world, per­ Rwanda, Bosnia, and Kosovo suggests that haps in places out of the media spotlight, they had a short-term impact...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2001) 18 (3): 41–46.
Published: 01 September 2001
... of reasons. this alone. Local leaders, regional and subre­ In Bosnia, the United Nations was asked to gional groups, civic groups, and nongovern­ do too much with too little; in Rwanda, mental organizations (NGOs) are crucial to Getting Beyond New York...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (3): 83–89.
Published: 01 September 2002
... more often than not when faced with Russian diplomatic corps is unequipped to hard choices. For example, despite the sharp understand free markets, free media, or the Russian rhetoric criticizing NATO enlarge­ nature of post-Cold War threats, and he ment and N A TO’s operations in Bosnia...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 18 (4): 19–25.
Published: 01 December 2002
...; their production was discontinued dancies inherent in arming and operating 18 years ago.4 A number of European allies op­ separate military forces. erate UAV fleets and have successfully operat­ But that does not mean that NATO allies ed them in Bosnia, Kosovo, and elsewhere. cannot...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2000) 17 (2): 97–99.
Published: 01 June 2000
... academic label hardly defined the rules of the game for America-the-hyperpower, as the French foreign minister soon labeled it. In the second Clinton administration, foreign policy has been markedly more success­ ful. The United States finally sent its troops into Bosnia, and used its air power...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2012) 29 (1): 101–110.
Published: 01 March 2012
... and foreigners as narrow-minded nationalists with suspect motives. They subject to moral condescension and intellectual scorn anyone who questions whether American military intervention is the most beneficial and long-lasting solution to the problems of Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, or Kosovo...
FIGURES
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2002) 19 (2): 76–87.
Published: 01 June 2002
... by definition, assumed to be beggars at the emerged. Australia withdrew from the juris­ gate? Bosnia, Kosovo, and other countries diction of the International Court of Justice that recently had or still have U .N . admin­ on maritime border questions, making it istrations, possess minimal...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 20 (4): 75–82.
Published: 01 December 2004
... election before reengaging elicited a dramatic Russian response. After with the United States. six years of close cooperation, including dur­ ing the war in Bosnia, the Clinton adminis­ The New U.S.-Russian Relationship tration was taken aback by Moscow’s vehe­ During the 2000 election campaign...
Journal Article
World Policy Journal (2004) 21 (2): 108–110.
Published: 01 June 2004
... days reinforced by graphic media accounts of atrocities present and past, ranging from the African slave trade and the Irish famine to the killing fields of Cambodia, from the Holo­ caust to the massacres in Bosnia and Rwanda. By responding imaginatively to this new global awareness, by showing...