Extending the European Security Community: Constructing Peace in the Balkans
By (Author) Professor Emilian Kavalski
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
30th March 2008
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Peace studies and conflict resolution
327.17209496
Hardback
272
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
475g
The region of the Balkans has become one of the emblematic features of the post-Cold War geography of international relations. Understanding the extension of the European zone of peace to the Balkans is at the heart of this pioneering work into the post-Cold War socialisation of the region. How is peace (i.e. a security-community-order) initiated in the Balkans Who are the dominant agents of such peace-promotion What processes suggest the initiation of (lasting) peace in the Balkans Under what circumstances do regional states comply with international standards Looking at the order-promoting processes of both the EU and Nato, Emilian Kavalski offers us the first detailed and theoretically-informed comparative analysis of the role played by external actors in the Balkan region as a whole. In doing so, he provides us with an insight into the processes of peace-promotion in general, and the patterns of security-community-building in the Balkans in particular.
'a significant empirical contribution to theory building and an important case study in the broader literature on the establishment of security communities...this bookwill take a legitimate and deserved place alongside other texts treating the political and security development of the Balkans and, potentially, within the wider realm of security studies.' Dr. Maurice Fitzgerald Lecturer in Modern European and International Studies, Loughborough University
Emilian Kavalski completed his PhD at Loughborough University and is currently Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Political Science at the University of Alberta, Canada.