Sarajevo: A Bosnian Kaleidoscope
Book Review: Fran Markowitz: Sarajevo: A Bosnian Kaleidoscope
Book Review: Fran Markowitz: Sarajevo: A Bosnian Kaleidoscope
The article examines demands for gender parity in political representation and the ways in which they respond to the frequent charges of essentialism implicit to such demands. The first part addresses arguments that have tried to avoid evoking the difference between men and women by simply appealing to justice between sexes.
In this paper I aim to revisit and add my own contribution to the theory of the spectacle by comparing Guy Debord’s model of the spectacle introduced in his book “The Society of the Spectacle” with a new type of spectacle – the spectacle of fear, here epitomized by the 9/11.
The Dayton Proximity Talks were held in the Wright - Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, USA from 1-21 November 1995. They resulted with the General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina (e.g. Dayton Peace Accords, Dayton Peace Agreement) that was signed by the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Republic of Croatia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and witnessed by USA, UK, Germany...
This conference paper, presented at Panel 3 “The future role of the International Community in Bosnia and Herzegovina” as part of the international conference “Bosnia & Herzegovina - a Road towards Stabilization, Prosperity and European Integration“ organised by the Hungarian Institute of International Affairs and held on November 5-6, 2009 in Budapest, Hungary,
A distinctive Albanian character is present in shaping of Kosovo’s statehood. The official politics of history and identity diminish the importance of other ethnic communities and focuses on Albanian mythology, represented by mixture of contemporary and historical personalities, events, places and memories.
According to the essential part of its constitutional makeup (1974 Constitution) the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (B-H) was defined as an entity of three constitutional, sovereign and mutually equal peoples: Croats, Serbs and Muslims (Bosniaks). Such a political and legal model was meant to ensure full protection of national interests of all three peoples...