John Phillips has been a correspondent with The Times of London since 1992, covering Italy as well as the Croatian and Bosnian wars. Since 2000 he has worked as a Special Correspondent for The Times in the Balkans, reporting on the overthrow of Milosevic in Yugoslavia and the conflicts in Macedonia and Serbia.
Times Literary Supplement: "useful and perceptive" "very much needed" "Phillips is a sure guide through the tangled web of Albanian politics." Balkan Academic News: "provides a fine example of war and peace journalism... a timely contribution to the debates about the future of South Eastern Europe... deserves a broad readership especially among ("Western") scholars, students and people who do not mind getting a dose of reality." Washington Times: "worth heeding" "The author takes no sides" The Tablet: "a subject of particular complexity...in his deft unravelling of this Balkan drama John Phillips has kept a remarkable and important objectivity." Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans: "...a useful and original contribution to the existing body of literature on Macedonia." 'This is a balanced and well-written account that tells a chilling story of war, compromise and survival. It deserves to be read by anyone interested in modern Balkan politics.' - Anglo-Hellenic Review
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