The Foreign Policies of Post-Yugoslav States From Yugoslavia to Euro
The post-Yugoslav states have developed very differently since Yugoslavia dissolved in the early 1990s. This book analyzes the foreign policies of the post-Yugoslav states, thereby focusing on the main goals, actors, decision-making processes and influenc
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From Yugoslavia to Europe Edited by
Soeren Keil Bernhard Stahl
10.1057/9781137384133 - The Foreign Policies of Post-Yugoslav States, Edited by Soeren Keil and Bernhard Stahl
Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology - PalgraveConnect - 2016-02-13
The Foreign Policies of Post-Yugoslav States
Series Editors: Spyros Economides, Associate Professor in International Relations and European Politics, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Kevin Featherstone, Eleftherios Venizelos Professor of Contemporary Greek Studies and Professor of European Politics, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Sevket Pamuk, Professor of Economics and Economic History, the Ataturk Institute for Modern Turkish History and Department of Economic, Bogaziçi (Bosphorus) University, Turkey Series Advisory Board: Richard Crampton, Emeritus Professor of Eastern European History at St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford Vladimir Gligorov, Staff Economist specialising in Balkan countries, the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, Austria Jacques Rupnik, Senior Research Fellow at the Centre d’études et de recherches internationales of Sciences Po, France Susan Woodward, Professor, the Graduate Programme in Political Science at the City University of New York, USA South-East Europe presents a compelling agenda: a region that has challenged European identities, values and interests like no other at formative periods of modern history and is now undergoing a set of complex transitions. It is a region made up of new and old European Union member states, as well as aspiring ones; early ‘democratising’ states and new post-communist regimes; states undergoing liberalising economic reforms, partially inspired by external forces, whilst coping with their own embedded nationalisms; and states obliged to respond to new and recurring issues of security, identity, well-being, social integration, faith and secularisation. This series examines issues of inheritance and adaptation. The disciplinary reach incorporates politics and international relations, modern history, economics and political economy and sociology. It links the study of South East-Europe across a number of social sciences to European issues of democratisation and economic reform in the post-transition age. It addresses ideas as well as institutions; policies as well as processes. It will include studies of the domestic and foreign policies of single states, relations between states and peoples in the region, and between the region and beyond. The EU is an obvious reference point for current research on South-East Europe, but this series also highlights the importance of South-East Europe in its eastern context; the Caucuses; the Black Sea and the Middle East. Titles include: Ayhan Aktar, Niyazi Kizilyürek and Umut Özkirimli (editors) NATIONALISM IN THE TROUBLED TRIANGLE Cyprus, Greece and Turkey
10.1057/9781137384133 - The Foreign Policies of Post-Yugoslav States, Edited by Soeren
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