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dc.contributor.authorSÖRENSEN, Jens Stilhoff
dc.date.accessioned2013-01-24T14:22:23Z
dc.date.available2013-01-24T14:22:23Z
dc.date.issued2009
dc.identifier.citationNew York : Berghahn Books, 2009en
dc.identifier.isbn9781845455606
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/25405
dc.description.abstractIn the 1990s, Yugoslavia, which had once been a role model for development, became a symbol for state collapse, external intervention and post-conflict reconstruction. As a result, the country became the locus for new policies to be developed and tested. These policies are in need of scrutiny and should be examined within the social and political realities that have emerged in the region, one left with two international protectorates (Bosnia and Kosovo), unresolved state formation issues, minority concerns, ethnic, social and political polarization. The author argues that both the process of state collapse and the recent changes in aid and reconstruction policy must be interpreted within the framework of a wider transformation of the international political economy and world order. Through an in-depth analysis and critical examination of post-conflict reconstruction in Kosovo, he argues that western governments and donor agencies have built policies on conceptions and assumptions for which there is no genuine historical or contemporary economic, social or political basis in the region. This discrepancy has provided further complications which are likely to remain for years to come, as recent developments in Kosovo show.en
dc.description.tableofcontents• Acknowledgements vii • Abbreviations ix • Introduction Aid Policy, Reconstruction and The New Periphery 1 (9) • Aid Policy Shift and State Transformation As Expressions Of Globalisation 10 (20) • Aid Policy and State Transformation: From Government to Governance and from Marshall Plan to Stability Pact 30 (30) • Small Nations in One State? The Legacy of the First Yugoslavia and the Partisan Revolution 60 (32) • Statehood beyond Ethnicity? Socialism, Federalism and the National Question in a Developmental State 92 (38) • Reframing Yugoslavia: From a Renegotiated State to Its Breakdown 130 (22) • Hegemony and the Political Economy of Populism: The Emergence of the Milosevicl Regime and the Transformation of Serbian Society 152 (31) • Adaptation and Resistance in a New Social Formation: Aspects of Cohesion and Fragmentation in Serbia Proper and in Kosovo 183 (38) • Postwar Governance, Reconstruction and Development in Kosovo, 1999-2007 221 (35) • International Support for the Development of Civil Society 256 (17) • Conclusion A Political Economy of Exclusion and Adaptation 273 (7) • Afterword 280 (5) • References 285 (19) • Index 304en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherBerghahn Booksen
dc.relation.isversionofhttp://hdl.handle.net/1814/6333en
dc.titleState collapse and reconstruction in the periphery : political economy, ethnicity and development in Yugoslavia, Serbia and Kosovoen
dc.typeBooken
eui.subscribe.skiptrue
dc.description.versionPublished version of EUI PhD thesis, 2006en


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