Bosnia Essay

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    The Bosnian War: the Fight for Independence In 1992 Bosnia and Herzegovina had one the biggest genocide to come after WWII, in turn killing over 800,000 civilians. The war consisted of two factions, the Croats and Serbs, both wanting territory in Bosnia. Soon Radovan Karadžić, former Bosnian Serb president, created a special army to support the Serbs, soon the Serbs started the new policy for “ethnic cleansing” many areas of non-Serb. For it was later that it was to be decided that is was complete

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    According to Eller (2006, pp.237), Vejas Gabriel Liulevicious recorded in a lecture series “Utopia and Terror in the Twentieth Century” (2003) identified the following four elements of mass movement: a. The “masses”- Before any mass movement, there should be a mob of people who are the disappointed and frustrated group. The group is mostly made up of lower classes and typically urban who are in search of imagined or artificial community.’ b. Machinery- Mass movement are occurrences that require

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    region), took a rapid decline. Some Balkan groups struggled to free themselves from the Ottoman Turks, and some had freed themselves from the Turkish rulers. During 1908, the Ottoman Empire’s power hungry neighbors, Austria-Hungary, annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina. Bosnia and Herzegovina were two areas within the Balkan

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    The Bosnian Genocide

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    Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia and Bosnia Herzegovina. During the collapse of Yugoslavia, many wars erupted through conflicting interests between the six states. One of the many wars that occurred was the Bosnia War from April 6th, 1992 to December 14th, 1995. Muslims, Serbs and Croats are the three main groups who populated Bosnia-Herzegovina. After Slovenia and Croatia declaring their independence, they began claiming territory in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

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    boundaries created when the former Yugoslavia dissolved and what conflict these caused. Be specific. Yugoslavia was a unified body of six southeastern countries. Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina are a few of the provinces that made up Yugoslavia. Tensions arose after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia-Herzegovina, which initiated the beginning of World War II. During WWII, Yugoslavia was under the rule of Communist Dictator Josip Tito. The first to successfully

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    A perfect, recent example of humanitarian intervention can be seen in Bosnia, when, in 1991, four of the six republics of the Yugoslavian federation declared independence, with various levels of violence accompanying. Bosnia and Herzegovina (hereinafter ‘Bosnia’) suffered the worst brutality with the Muslim population (45%) being outgunned by the better equipped Serbs (32%) and the Croats (18%). (8) Ethnic cleansing

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    Introduction Media and education are agents for transmitting information between and among people during pre-conflict, conflict, and post conflict stages in fragile states. Various parties use these agents of information to pursue their agenda and interests. On one hand, media and education have served the purpose of spreading fear and creating a psychological impact to propagate violence such as crimes against humanity, war crimes, and genocide. Conversely, during peacebuilding processes, they have

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    Yugoslavia Research Paper

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    Yugoslavia was the first European country to perish since World War II. The country consisted of six republics, each with its own parliament and president: these were the SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SR Croatia, SR Macedonia, SR Montenegro, SR Slovenia, and SR Serbia and autonomous provinces Kosovo and Vajvodina. Yugo means south and Slavia means land of the “slavs”. Its’ disintegration was caused by a number of political, social and economic factors including the Yugoslav wars (ethnic cleansings)

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    The war and genocide in Bosnia was unpredictable and tragic. Or was it? Let’s start by stating that obviously the war was tragic; however, was it truly unpredictable. Many argue that, “...the outbreak of fighting in the 1990s was merely the latest chapter in a long history of an ethnic conflict that is too complex for outsiders to understand and too intractable to be resolved” (Johnston & Eastvold, 2004). So if that is true then we should come to expect religiously motivated conflicts like the Bosnian

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    War II. It was a ruthless mass murder that occurred in Srebrenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina, in July of 1995, near the end of the Bosnian War. The killing was executed by the Bosnian Serb army; they were also known as the Army of Republika Srpska. Their goal was to “cleanse” the area of all Muslims, also known as Bosniaks in this

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