German Antiguerrilla Operations in the Balkans (1941-1944).
Title | German Antiguerrilla Operations in the Balkans (1941-1944). PDF eBook |
Author | Robert M. Kennedy |
Publisher | |
Pages | 114 |
Release | 1989 |
Genre | World War, 1939-1945 |
ISBN |
Hold the Balkans!
Title | Hold the Balkans! PDF eBook |
Author | Robert M. Kennedy |
Publisher | White Mane Publishing Company |
Pages | 104 |
Release | 2001 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781572492288 |
This publication makes the German experiences in the Balkans available to a wider audience.
The German Campaigns in the Balkans (spring, 1941).
Title | The German Campaigns in the Balkans (spring, 1941). PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 188 |
Release | 1953 |
Genre | World War, 1939-1945 |
ISBN |
Governing Territorial Development in the Western Balkans
Title | Governing Territorial Development in the Western Balkans PDF eBook |
Author | Erblin Berisha |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 398 |
Release | 2021-06-19 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 3030721248 |
This book offers a multifaceted overview of the evolution of spatial development, governance and planning in the Western Balkans from an institutionalist perspective. Written by experts in the field, it features various regional and national studies covering topics such as regional and spatial planning, territorial development and governance, and regional and cross-border cooperation in the Western Balkans. Offering a wealth of national, regional and local insights on territorial cooperation, development and planning, this book will appeal to scholars in regional and spatial sciences and related fields alike.
Balkan Tragedy
Title | Balkan Tragedy PDF eBook |
Author | Susan L. Woodward |
Publisher | Brookings Institution Press |
Pages | 558 |
Release | 1995 |
Genre | Nationalism |
ISBN |
" Yugoslavia was well positioned at the end of the cold war to make a successful transition to a market economy and westernization. Yet two years later, the country had ceased to exist, and devastating local wars were being waged to create new states. Between the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989 and the start of the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina in March 1992, the country moved toward disintegration at astonishing speed. The collapse of Yugoslavia into nationalist regimes led not only to horrendous cruelty and destruction, but also to a crisis of Western security regimes. Coming at the height of euphoria over the end of the cold war and the promise of a ""new world order,"" the conflict presented Western governments and the international community with an unwelcome and unexpected set of tasks. Their initial assessment that the conflict was of little strategic significance or national interest could not be sustained in light of its consequences. By 1994 the conflict had emerged as the most challenging threat to existing norms and institutions that Western leaders faced. And by the end of 1994, more than three years after the international community explicitly intervened to mediate the conflict, there had been no progress on any of the issues raised by the country's dissolution. In this book, Susan Woodward explains what happened to Yugoslavia and what can be learned from the response of outsiders to its crisis. She argues that focusing on ancient ethnic hatreds and military aggression was a way to avoid the problem and misunderstood nationalism in post-communist states. The real origin of the Yugoslav conflict, Woodward explains, is the disintegration of governmental authority and the breakdown of a political and civil order, a process that occurred over a prolonged period. The Yugoslav conflict is inseparable from international change and interdependence, and it is not confined to the Balkans but is part of a more widespread phenomenon of political disintegration. Woodward's analysis is based on her first-hand experience before the country's collapse and then during the later stages of the Bosnian war as a member of the UN operation sent to monitor cease-fires and provide humanitarian assistance. She argues that Western action not only failed to prevent the spread of violence or to negotiate peace, but actually exacerbated the conflict. Woodward attempts to explain why these challenges will not cease or the Yugoslav conflicts end until the actual causes of the conflict, the goals of combatants, and the fundamental issues they pose for international order are better understood and addressed. "
Spies of the Balkans
Title | Spies of the Balkans PDF eBook |
Author | Alan Furst |
Publisher | Random House Trade Paperbacks |
Pages | 290 |
Release | 2011-06-14 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0812977386 |
Greece, 1940. In the port city of Salonika, with its wharves and brothels, dark alleys and Turkish mansions, a tense political drama is being played out. As Adolf Hitler plans to invade the Balkans, spies begin to circle—and Costa Zannis, a senior police official, must deal with them all. He is soon in the game, working to secure an escape route for fugitives from Nazi Berlin that is protected by German lawyers, Balkan detectives, and Hungarian gangsters—and hunted by the Gestapo. Meanwhile, as war threatens, the erotic life of the city grows passionate. For Zannis, that means a British expatriate who owns the local ballet academy, a woman from the dark side of Salonika society, and the wife of a shipping magnate. With extraordinary historical detail and a superb cast of characters, Spies of the Balkans is a stunning novel about a man who risks everything to fight back against the world’s evil.
Life and Death in the Balkans
Title | Life and Death in the Balkans PDF eBook |
Author | Bato Tomasevic |
Publisher | C. HURST & CO. PUBLISHERS |
Pages | 548 |
Release | 2008 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 9781850659136 |
This compellingly written autobiography covers the past century and more in the life of Bato Tomasevic's Montenegrin family in the harsh and ever-turbulent mountains of southern Yugoslavia. The narrative begins some fifty years before the Balkan wars (1912-1913) and recounts the harrowing experiences of the Tomasevic clan in the twentieth century's two World Wars. The author conveys vividly the hardships of life in under Italian and German occupation: the daily executions, the heroism of underground workers and the effects of occupation on ordinary people. Bato Tomasevic was a boy soldier with the Partisans and experienced the horrors of warfare against the Chetniks, cheating death in an ambush in Eastern Bosnia.Just as vivid are his accounts of, inter alia, post-war Yugoslavia, his narrow escape in the Munich air disaster, life in Belgrade in the hopeful sixties and seventies, the break-up of the Federation after Tito's death, and the efforts of extreme nationalists to create a Greater Serbia and a Greater Croatia through armed might and ethnic cleansing. The family saga ends with Tomasevic's experience of the NATO bombing of Serbia in March 1999 and the downfall and imprisonment of President Milosevic. Tomasevic's story is at once fascinating, heroic, tragic, sometimes even funny, but unquestionably moving, such as his description of he and his mother finding his dead brother's skull or of witnessing a suicide by a young German prisoner of war of roughly the same age as him. It is a story as remembered by a young boy, whose family, like his country, was drawn into a violent and brutal conflict that it could not escape.