Balkan.Perspectives #24

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25 years after the war in Kosovo: is the space for peacebuilding shrinking?

A little more than a year ago, I was working on an assignment in Armenia and met a group of displaced ethnic Armenian women from Nagorno-Karabakh – the territory which is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan. These women had been displaced by the conflict to Yerevan and had set-up a community-center. After going through all the introductions, we sat […]

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The Return of Ethno-Nationalism: How History Fuels Conflict in the Western Balkans

A report by the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights on dealing with the past in the region of former Yugoslavia has issued a stark warning: “the divisive and hateful narratives that spearheaded the wars of the 1990s are back and regaining strength.”[1] The report highlights a well-documented increase in hate speech, inter-ethnic violence and intolerance. There is an […]

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Less is More: Redundancy as the essence of nationally tinted memorial practices

In the search for meaning, catharsis, and understanding of personal and collective experiences after wars, societies turn to memorial practices seeking refuge from forgetting and unforgetting. Memorial practices and the culture of memory (and forgetting) they create clearly communicate the stage of confrontation with the wartime past that a post-conflict society is in and the symbols, ideas, and values on […]

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The Genocide in Srebrenica: A Perspective Through the Proposed UN Resolution

The planned adoption of a United Nations resolution on the Srebrenica genocide, scheduled for mid-May this year, represents a crucial step towards global recognition and commemoration of this tragic event from the still-recent past. Although the resolution itself does not carry direct legal consequences, it plays a fundamental role in the symbolic and declarative recognition of the crime and demonstrates […]

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