1. THE LEGAL CONTEXT OF YUGOSLAVIAS DISINTEGRATION: SOVEREIGNTY AND THE SELF-DETERMINATION OF PEOPLES; 2. THE PRE-1914 ADMINISTRATIVE BORDERS AND THE BIRTH OF YUGOSLAVIA; 3. YUGOSLAVIAS ADMINISTRATIVE BORDERS (1918-1991); 4. THE (SELF-) DETERMINATION OF THE YUGOSLAV PEOPLES; 5. INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF THE (FORMER) YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC; 6. CHANGING BORDERS BY FORCE; 7. CONCLUSION: FORMER YUGOSLAVIAS EURO-ATLANTIC INTEGRATIONL; BIBLIOGRAPHY
Dr. Ana S. Trbovich is the Director of the Center for European Integration and Public Administration at the Faculty of Economics, Finance and Administration in Belgrade, Serbia. She served as Serbia's Assistant Minister of International Economic Relations in charge of EU accession process from 2002 to 2006.
"The question of the borders of a new State that emerges following
secession is a matter largely ignored by scholars, especially in
the context of Yugoslavia's meltdown that commenced in the 1990s.
Trbovich's book fills this important gap... [Her] extensive
analysis of the relevant historical, political and legal literature
has produced an interdisciplinary study full of insights otherwise
not available in the literature published to date. This scholarly
work
is a valuable addition to the existing literature on the still
unfolding disintegration of Yugoslavia. Policy makers and scholars
will benefit from reading it."--Peter Radan, Associate Professor of
Law,
Macquarie University
"Ana Trbovich's book offers a new perspective on the tangled web
that the international community wove around the dissolution or
destruction of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in the
1990s. A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia's Disintegration critically
explores the complex interplay of self-determination, nationalism,
the relevance of internal borders, and international politics, even
as the status of Kosovo continues to bedevil policy-makers
and international lawyers a decade after the Yugoslav wars were
'resolved' at Dayton in 1995. The book's analysis and conclusions
will be relevant far beyond the situation of Yugoslavia, as the
world seeks to
develop principled criteria for dealing with secessionist claims
from Somalia to Sri Lanka, Cyprus to Kurdistan."
--Hurst Hannum, University of Hong Kong
"The question of the borders of a new State that emerges following
secession is a matter largely ignored by scholars, especially in
the context of Yugoslavia's meltdown that commenced in the 1990s.
Trbovich's book fills this important gap... [Her] extensive
analysis of the relevant historical, political and legal literature
has produced an interdisciplinary study full of insights otherwise
not available in the literature published to date. This scholarly
work
is a valuable addition to the existing literature on the still
unfolding disintegration of Yugoslavia. Policy makers and scholars
will benefit from reading it."--Peter Radan, Associate Professor of
Law,
Macquarie University
"The strength of Trbovich's book lies in her novel and
interdisciplinary analysis of Yugoslavia's disintegration, and in
the book's well-researched and extensive evidentiary foundation.
Further, she makes a valuable contribution by placing the
dissolution of Yugoslavia within the wider conceptual framework of
competing rights to sovereignty and self-determination. In
addition, the book provides an important balance in the
historiography of the conflict, in
contrast to the many studies that fail to offer an accurate
background and that yield conclusions that both lack context and
lead to policy prescriptions that are inherently flawed."
Angela Kachuyevski,
The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs
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