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Ethnonationalist Conflict in Postcommunist States - Varieties of Governance in Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Kosovo (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,947
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Ethnonationalist Conflict in Postcommunist States - Varieties of Governance in Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Kosovo (Hardcover)
Series: National and Ethnic Conflict in the 21st Century
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Ethnonationalist Conflict in Postcommunist States investigates why
some Eastern European states transitioned to new forms of
governance with minimal violence while others broke into civil war.
In Bulgaria, the Turkish minority was subjected to coerced
assimilation and forced expulsion, but the nation ultimately
negotiated peace through institutional channels. In Macedonia,
periodic outbreaks of insurgent violence escalated to armed
conflict. Kosovo's internal warfare culminated in NATO's
controversial bombing campaign. In the twenty-first century, these
conflicts were subdued, but violence continued to flare
occasionally and impede durable conflict resolution. In this
comparative study, Maria Koinova applies historical
institutionalism to conflict analysis, tracing ethnonationalist
violence in postcommunist states to a volatile, formative period
between 1987 and 1992. In this era of instability, the incidents
that brought majorities and minorities into dispute had a profound
impact and a cumulative effect, as did the interventions of
international agents and kin states. Whether the conflicts
initially evolved in peaceful or violent ways, the dynamics of
their disputes became self-perpetuating and informally
institutionalized. Thus, external policies or interventions could
affect only minimal change, and the impact of international agents
subsided over time. Regardless of the constitutions, laws, and
injunctions, majorities, minorities, international agents, and kin
states continue to act in accord with the logic of informally
institutionalized conflict dynamics. Koinova analyzes the
development of those dynamics in Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Kosovo,
drawing on theories of democratization, international intervention,
and path-dependence as well as interviews and extensive fieldwork.
The result is a compelling account of the underlying causal
mechanisms of conflict perpetuation and change that will shed light
on broader patterns of ethnic violence.
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