As the only member of NATO and the European Union to support Slobodan Milošević's regime in the conflict following the breakup of Yugoslavia, Greece broke ranks with its Western allies, frustrating their efforts to impose sanctions against Serbia. Distinguished Greek journalist Takis Michas covered
Serbia Since 1989: Politics and Society under Milošević and After
✍ Scribed by Sabrina P. Ramet, Vjeran I. Pavlakovic (eds.)
- Publisher
- University of Washington Press
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 457
- Series
- JACKSON SCHOOL PUBLICATIONS IN INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
During their thirteen years in power, Slobodan Milosevic and his cohorts plunged Yugoslavia into wars of ethnic cleansing, leading to the murder of thousands of civilians. The Milosevic regime also subverted the nation's culture, twisted the political mainstream into a virulent nationalist mold, sapped the economy through war and the criminalization of a free market, returned to gender relations of a bygone era, and left the state so dysfunctional that its peripheries - Kosovo, Vojvodina, and Montenegro - have been struggling to maximize their distance from Belgrade, through far-reaching autonomy or through outright independence.
In this valuable collection of essays, Vjeran Pavlakovic, Reneo Lukic, and Obrad Kesic examine elements of continuity and discontinuity from the Milosevic era to the twenty-first century, the struggle at the center of power, and relations between Serbia and Montenegro. Contributions by Sabrina Ramet, James Gow, and Milena Michalski explore the role of Serbian wartime propaganda and the impact of the war on Serbian society. Essays by Eric Gordy, Maja Miljovic, Marko Hoare, and Kari Osland look at the legacy of Serbia's recent wars-issues of guilt and responsibility, the economy, and the trial of Slobodan Milosevic in The Hague. Sabrina Ramet and Biljana Bijelic address the themes of culture and values. Frances Trix, Emil Kerenji, and Dennis Reinhartz explore the peripheries in the politics of Kosovo/a, Vojvodina, and Serbia's Roma.
Serbia Since 1989 reveals a Serbia that is still traumatized from Milosevic's rule and groping toward redefining its place in the world.
✦ Table of Contents
Contents
......Page 7
Preface
......Page 10
1. Introduction: Serbia as a Dysfunctional State......Page 14
Part I: The Center......Page 22
2. Serbia Transformed? Political Dynamicsin the Milopevic Era and After......Page 24
3. From the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia tothe Union of Serbia and Montenegro......Page 66
4. An Airplane with Eighteen Pilots:Serbia after Milopevic......Page 106
Part II: The Legacy of War......Page 134
5. Under the Holy Lime Tree: The Inculcation of Neurotic and Psychotic Syndromes as aSerbian Wartime Strategy, 1986–95......Page 136
6. The Impact of the War on Serbia: Spoiled Appetites and Progressive Decay......Page 154
7. Postwar Guilt and Responsibility in Serbia: The Effort to Confront It and theEffort to Avoid It......Page 177
8. Crime and the Economy under Milopevic and His Successors......Page 203
9. The Trial of Slobodan Milopevic......Page 238
Part III: Culture and Values......Page 264
10. The Politics of the Serbian Orthodox Church......Page 266
11. Nationalism, Motherhood, and the Reordering of Women’s Power......Page 297
Part IV: Peripheries......Page 318
12. Kosovar Albanians betweena Rock and a Hard Place......Page 320
13. Vojvodina since 1988......Page 361
14. The Yugoslav Roma under Slobodan Milopevic and After......Page 392
Part V: Conclusion......Page 404
15. The Sirens and the Guslar: An Afterword......Page 406
16. Epilogue: Serbia after the Death of Milopevic......Page 425
Glossary......Page 432
Contributors......Page 436
Index
......Page 442
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