Front cover image for Bosnia after Dayton : nationalist partition and international intervention

Bosnia after Dayton : nationalist partition and international intervention

Bose (comparative politics, London School of Economics and Political Science) explores the political dimensions of the internally led reconstruction process in the Balkan country since the late-1995 Dayton Peace Agreement. He argues that the post-war experience of Bosnia-Herzegovina is important and relevant for its own sake, but also as a highly visible testing ground for post-Cold War interventions in general and specifically the agendas of Europe, transatlantic security organizations, and development agencies. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Print Book, English, 2002
Oxford University Press, New York, 2002
History
viii, 295 pages : maps ; 23 cm
9780195158489, 0195158482
49249994
1. An Important and Complex Place: Bosnia after Dayton
2. A State by International Design? Liberal Internationalism and the Balkans
3. Mostar, 1994-2001: Nationalist Partition and International Intervention in a Bosnian Town
4. Bosnia and the Partition Debate
an Intervention
5. Democracy amid Division: the Institutional Architecture of the Dayton State
6. Post-Yugoslav Futures: Lessons from (and for) International Intervention