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9781843312451

The Case for Kosova

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781843312451

  • ISBN10:

    184331245X

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2006年08月01日
  • Publisher: Anthem Pr

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Summary

This book makes the case for the independence of Kosova the former province of ls"old-Yugoslaviars" and now temporarily a United Nations-led International protectorate at a time in which international diplomacy is deeply involved in solving the contested issue of its 'Final Status'. Negotiations began in January 2006 under the auspices of a United Nations Special Envoy, and have been given renewed impetus by the international communityrs"s determination to arrive at a solution.The Case for Kosovaaims to contribute to these negotiations, by providing informed arguments for a different approach to the issue of Kosovars"s status beyond the limitations of current debates. Its aim is to counteract the anti-Albanian propaganda waged by some parties, but never to propose a counter-propaganda hostile to others or to the goals of a democratic Kosova. Debates on Kosova have largely concentrated on a specific aspect of the issue: either on ideology and myth construction (ignoring translations into practice); on geo-politics (missing the deep implications for stability and security); or on policy (lacking a conceptual understanding of both ideologies and processes). Until now, no book has linked these different fields in a persuasive manner.The Case for Kosovafills this gap with an intellectually challenging and politically relevant commentary from key players in the debate.

Author Biography

Anna Di Lellio is a sociologist and a journalist. She obtained her Ph.D. from Columbia University, New York. Ivo Banac is Bradford Durfee Professor of History, Yale University. Isa Blumi is Assistant Professor of History at Georgia State University. Janusz Bugajski is Director of the New European Democracies Project and Senior Fellow, Europe Program, Center for Strategic International Studies (CSIS), Washington, D.C. Howard Clark is Honorary Research Fellow with the Forgiveness and Reconciliation Center of the University of Coventry, where his main concern since 1991 has been peace in Kosova. Catherine Croft is a Senior Research Associate for the Public International Law & Policy Group (PILPG). Alain Ducellier is Professor Emeritus of Medieval History with a focus on Byzantium and the Balkans at the University of Toulouse II, Le Mirail. Vjosa Dobruna is President of the Board of Radio Television of Kosova. Andrew Herscher is Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan with joint appointments to the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, and the International Institute. Bernd Fischer is Professor of Balkan History and chair of the Department of History at Indiana University, Fort Wayne. Dom Lush Gjergji is a Catholic priest in the parish of Binqa, Kosova, in the Dioceses of Skopje-Prizren. Ismail Kadare, Albania's best known poet and novelist, was the 2005 recipient of the Man Booker International Prize. Machiel Kiel is Director of the Netherlands Historical and Archeological Institute in Istanbul. Muhammedin Kullashi is Professor of Philosophy at the UniversitF de Paris VIII since 1992. Paulin Kola is a BBC analyst. Dr. Kola earned his Ph.D. at the London School of Economics. Albin Kurti is one of the founders of the movement 'Self-determination', which started in 2005. Noel Malcolm has a doctorate in History from Cambridge University; he is a Senior Research Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, and a Fellow of the British Academy. Julie Mertus is an Associate Professor and Co-Director of the MA program in Ethics, Peace and Global Affairs at American University. Jennifer Ober is Peace Fellow with the Public International Law & Policy Group. Owen Pearson taught Latin and Greek for 40 years to senior forms of preparatory schools. Henry H. Perritt, Jr. directs Chicago-Kent's Program in Financial Services Law. Besnik Pula is a Ph.D. Candidate at the Department of Sociology of the University of Michigan. Stacy Sullivan is a senior editor at the London-based Institute for War and Peace Reporting and former Balkans correspondent for Newsweek. Paul R. Williams is Rebecca Grazier Professor of Law & International Relations, American University.

Table of Contents

Is Kosova a late creation of the Yugoslav state and should it be considered the cradle of the Serb nation? p. 1
Were Albanians always on the side of the Ottoman empire against Christian powers? p. 11
Is it true that Albanians in Kosova are not Albanians, but descendants from Albanized Serbs? p. 19
Is the Muslim conversion of Albanians the main cause of the estrangement between Slavs and Albanians? p. 23
Is it true that Albanians invaded Kosova? p. 27
Is it true that Albanians are responsible for an orchestrated campaign to destroy Kosova's cultural heritage in modern times? p. 37
Have ethnic and religious animosities caused the destruction of the artistic and cultural heritage of Kosova during the Ottoman period? p. 43
Was the Albanian opposition to the Serb kingdom's annexation in 1912 without justification? p. 53
Is the complaint about the Serb state's deportation policy of Albanians between the two world wars based on myth? p. 59
Is it true that Tito's Yugoslav policies favored Albanians in Kosova? p. 63
Is it true that Albanians collaborated with Nazi Germany during WWII? p. 69
Did Albanians in Kosova breach their voluntary commitment to join Yugoslavia in 1945? p. 77
Have Albanians been against a peaceful solution to the question of Kosova's autonomy? p. 85
Have Albanian terrorism and separatism been the cause of the Yugoslav state violence during the 1990s? p. 93
Was the KLA a criminal, terrorist and Islamist organization? p. 103
Is it true that there is no right of self-determination for Kosova? p. 109
Was the former 1999 NATO intervention an illegal war against the Former Republic of Yugoslavia? p. 121
Is it true that the NATO bombing and the KLA were responsible for the Albanian refugee crisis and that the number of Albanians killed during the war has been grossly exaggerated? p. 129
Were Albanians responsible for reverse ethnic cleansing after the war? p. 135
Is it true that an independent Kosova will inevitably be a mono-ethnic state, unless Serb communities and their territories become autonomous? p. 145
Is it true that a human rights culture, respectful of minorities, is impossible in Kosova? p. 155
Would an independent Kosova be an Islamist state? p. 159
Would Kosova survive economically as an independent state? p. 165
Is it true that Kosova cannot govern itself and needs further international tutelage, or conditional independence? p. 173
Is it true that Kosova is a clannish society still regulated by the Kanun, or the customary law, and does not belong to the West? p. 179
Is Greater Albania a threat? p. 185
Is it true that the independence of Kosova would destabilize the Balkans and endanger the possibility of stabilizing other areas of the world, for example, Chechnya or Nagorno Karabach? p. 195
Is it true that decentralization is the key to security and stability in Kosova? p. 201
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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