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International Criminal Tribunals as Actors of Domestic Change
  • Language: en

International Criminal Tribunals as Actors of Domestic Change

International Criminal Tribunals do not only do justice and judge the perpetrators of the most heinous crimes. This book present the first part of the results of a five-year international research project, based on field research in ten European and African countries.

Defragmenting Yugoslavia
  • Language: de
  • Pages: 105

Defragmenting Yugoslavia

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2011
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

International Criminal Tribunals as Actors of Domestic Change
  • Language: en

International Criminal Tribunals as Actors of Domestic Change

Do International Criminal Tribunals trigger social change, provide reconciliation, stabilize fragile post-conflict societies? Many authors claim they do, but they base their assumptions mainly on theoretical considerations and opinion polls. The editors and authors of this book take a different position: based on extensive field research in nine European and African countries, they examine whether tribunal decisions resulted in changes in media frames about the conflicts which gave rise to the creation of these tribunals. International Tribunals hardly ever shape or change the grand narratives about wars and other conflicts, but they often manage to trigger small changes in media frames which, in some cases, even lead to public reflexion about guilt and responsibility and more awareness for (the respective enemy's) victims. On an empirical basis, this book shows the potential of International Criminal Justice, the possibilities, but also the limits of International Criminal Tribunals. Volume 2 presents the evidence from Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan and South Sudan.

Resetting the Left in Europe
  • Language: en

Resetting the Left in Europe

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Intangible Cultural Heritage and Reconciliation in the Western Balkans
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 246

Intangible Cultural Heritage and Reconciliation in the Western Balkans

This book considers the sensitive heritage elements linked to the very issue of the origins of nations. Beliefs, rituals, and traditional knowledge are examples of intangible cultural heritage (ICH), which communities globally regard as the core of their cultural identity. When it is unclear which element of heritage “belongs” to whom, like in the Western Balkans, where the majority of heritage elements are shared, ICH disputes exacerbate conflict. Its mishandling is especially acute when minority heritage is excluded from governmental cultural policies. With a focus on Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Montenegro, this book has a global thematic scope, theoretical depth, and policy relevance to the scholars of anthropology and heritage studies as well as to those interested in cultural diversity, human rights, and cultural and educational policies. It will serve as a guide for those who professionally use cultural heritage, or want to start doing so, in the processes of reconciliation, stabilization, and development.

Building Democracy in the Yugoslav Successor States
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 475

Building Democracy in the Yugoslav Successor States

A comprehensive analysis of how the Yugoslav successor states have coped with the challenges of building democracy since 1990.

Cultural Governance in a Global Context
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 343

Cultural Governance in a Global Context

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-01-17
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  • Publisher: Springer

This original book explores the character of cultural governance of arts and cultural institutions in eight countries across five continents. Examining strategy and decision-making at an organisational level, this is the first empirical contribution on cultural policy and management, revealing how it is applied across the globe in otherwise unexplored countries. Concerned with the assumption that ‘one-size fits all’, the chapter authors analyse how cultural governance is managed within arts organizations in a range of countries to assess whether some locations are trying to apply unsuitable models. The chapters aim to discover and assess new practices to benefit the understanding of cultural governance and the arts sector which have as yet been excluded from the literature. As a collection of local accounts, this book offers a broad and rich perspective on managing cultural governance around the world.

Dystopian Depictions of Serbia in British Travel Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 110

Dystopian Depictions of Serbia in British Travel Literature

Without any doubt, one of the European regions that has never ceased to trouble the Westerner traveller is the Balkan Peninsula, which functioned as a terra incognita within the British travel canon, and served as the transit point to the Ottoman Empire or the Old Grecian world. At a time when Anglo-Saxonism occupied a prevalent position in British political discourse, the Balkan Peninsula came to epitomise all the negative qualities of the Orient that British travellers were anxious to apply to alien countries that were far removed from the nation-building agenda of the Empire. As such, classified as the fringe of the Orient, Serbia was persistently depicted as a politically unstable region...

The UN International Criminal Tribunals
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 306

The UN International Criminal Tribunals

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-03-24
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Both the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) are now about to close. Bachmann and Fatic look back at the achievements and shortcomings of both tribunals from an interdisciplinary perspective informed by sociology, political science, history, and philosophy of law and based upon on two key notions: the concepts of legitimacy and efficiency. The first asks to what extent the input (creation) of, the ICTY and the ICTR can be regarded as legitimate in light of the legal and public debate in the early 1990s. The second confronts the output (the procedures and decisions) of the ICTY and the ICTR with the tasks b...

The Rise and Fall of Communist Yugoslavism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 309

The Rise and Fall of Communist Yugoslavism

The Rise and Fall of Communist Yugoslavism: Soft Nation‐Building in Yugoslavia examines how the Communist Party of Yugoslavia incorporated the idea of a Yugoslav nation into its ideology and created the Yugoslav Soft Nation‐Building project after the Second World War. With an innovative approach of researching three levels of research (from above, from below and from the viewpoint of interethnic relations) the book brings forward an original concept of soft nation‐building, with a focus on the Slovenian‐Yugoslav dimension. Drawing on archival sources from Ljubljana, Zagreb, Sarajevo and Belgrade, the author argues that after the abandonment of the Yugoslav national idea, two Yugoslav...