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The Foreign Policies of Post-Yugoslav States: From Yugoslavia to Europe

✍ Scribed by Soeren Keil, Bernhard Stahl


Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Leaves
279
Series
New Perspectives on South-East Europe
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The post-Yugoslav states have developed very differently since Yugoslavia dissolved in the early 1990s. This collection analyzes the foreign policies of the post-Yugoslav states focusing on the main goals, actors, decision-making processes and influences on the foreign policies of these countries. It demonstrates how internal and external developments help to explain why their foreign policy, and with it EU integration, have proceeded so differently. Country experts analyze the seven states that emerged from the former Yugoslavia and point towards unique developments in these countries that have had a profound impact on their foreign policy. From Kosovo's struggle for recognition to Macedonia's name dispute with Greece, this volume discusses foreign policy from a unique insider perspective, thereby offering an original analysis of decision-making processes and foreign policy instruments in the post-Yugoslav states.

✦ Table of Contents


PART I: POINT OF DEPARTURE
1. Introduction: The Foreign Policies of the post-Yugoslav States; Soeren Keil and Bernhard Stahl
2. Allies are Forever (until they are no more): Yugoslavia's Multivectoral Foreign Policy during Titoism; Katrin Boeckh

PART II: EARLY DEPARTURE - EARLY ARRIVAL
3. From the Balkans to Central Europe and Back: The Foreign Policy of Slovenia; Ana BojinoviΔ‡ Fenko und Zlatko Ε abič
4. Croatia fast-forward Foreign Policy: From Yugoslavia to the EU
Senada Šelo Šabić

PART III: EARLY DEPARTURE - LATE ARRIVAL
5. Policy Consensus during Institutional Change: Macedonian Foreign Policy since Independence; Cvete Koneska
6. Complex System, Complex Foreign Policy: The Foreign Policy of Bosnia and Herzegovina; Adnan Huskić
PART IV: JOINT DEPARTURE - DIFFERENT ARRIVALS
7. An Orpheus Syndrome? Serbian Foreign Policy after the Dissolution of Yugoslavia; Mladen Mladenov
8. From Creeping to Sprinting: The Foreign Policy of Montenegro; Jelena Džankić
9. Foreign Policy as a Constitutive Element of Statehood and Statehood Prerogative: The Case of Kosovo ; GΓ«zim Krasniqi
10. Conclusion: Foreign Policy Analysis and the post-Yugoslav State; Amelia Hadfield


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