Notes
See data at Gallup Balkan Monitor, available at: http://www.balkan-monitor.eu/, accessed 29 July 2011.
The contributions in this volume (except Aybet & Bieber) were first presented at the annual convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies in Boston in 2009. I would like to acknowledge the support and patience of Terry Cox and Sarah Lennon, as well as the financial support of the British Academy for my research and the joint research with Gülnur Aybet through the British Academy Large Grant for the project ‘From Peace to State Building: An Assessment of NATO and EU Conditionality in Bosnia and Herzegovina’.
This has been a central argument by a number of think tanks, such as the European Stability Initiative and not least the EU itself (see Guisan Citation2011).
Following the arrest of Mladić, the state broadcaster RTS, however, did devote more space to war crimes and the screening of documentaries on Srebrenica and other war crimes from the Bosnian war than following previous arrests (Sadović Citation2011).
BiH is divided into two entities, the Federation of Bosnia & Hercegovina (Federacije Bosne i Hercegovina, FBiH), populated mostly by Croats and Bosniaks, and the Serb Republic (Republika Srpska, RS), with an overwhelming Serb population.
See data at Gallup Balkan Monitor, available at: http://www.balkan-monitor.eu/, accessed 29 July 2011.