All Stories

  1. Media and Politics in Southeastern Europe
  2. Religion and Politics in Post-Socialist Central and Southeastern Europe
  3. Introduction
  4. The Know Nothing Party: Three Theories about its Rise and Demise
  5. Civic and Uncivic Values in Macedonia
  6. The Relationship between Martin Heidegger’s Nazism and his Interest in the Pre‐Socratics
  7. The ICTY – Controversies, Successes, Failures, Lessons
  8. Croatia and Serbia since 1991: An Assessment of Their Similarities and Differences
  9. Civic and Uncivic values: Serbia in the Post-Milošević Era
  10. Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two
  11. Politics in Croatia since 1990
  12. Serbia and Montenegro since 1989
  13. Central and Southeast European Politics since 1989
  14. Post-socialist models of rule in Central and Southeastern Europe
  15. Central and Southeastern Europe, 1989
  16. Central and Southeastern Europe, 2009
  17. Reconfiguring the Polis, Reconceptualizing Rights: Individual Rights and the Irony of History in Central and Southeastern Europe
  18. Albania — Then and Now
  19. Redefining the Boundaries of Human Rights: The Case of Eastern Europe
  20. Vladko Maček and Croatian History: An Introduction
  21. Vladko Maček and the Croatian Peasant Defence in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia
  22. The denial syndrome and its consequences: Serbian political culture since 2000
  23. The NDH – An Introduction
  24. Personalities in the History of the NDH
  25. Eastern European Catholic Societies
  26. Thy will be done: the Catholic Church and politics in Poland since 1989
  27. The way we were – and should be again? European Orthodox Churches and the “idyllic past”
  28. Thinking about Yugoslavia
  29. The collapse of East European communism
  30. The roots of the Yugoslav collapse
  31. Memoirs and autobiographies
  32. Milošević's place in history
  33. Dilemmas in post-Dayton Bosnia
  34. Debates about intervention
  35. Who's to blame, and for what? Rival accounts of the war
  36. The scourge of nationalism and the quest for harmony
  37. Crisis in Kosovo/a (with Angelo Georgakis)
  38. Lands and peoples: Bosnia, Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia
  39. Southern republics: Macedonia and Montenegro in contemporary history
  40. Conclusion: controversies, methodological disputes, and suggested reading
  41. “Fighting for the Christian Nation”: The Christian Right and American Politics
  42. Explaining the Yugoslav meltdown, 1: “For a charm of pow'rful trouble, Like a hell-broth boil and bubble”:1Theories about the Roots of the Yugoslav Troubles
  43. Explaining the Yugoslav meltdown, 2: A Theory about the Causes of the Yugoslav Meltdown: The Serbian National Awakening as a “Revitalization Movement”*
  44. Martyr in his own mind: the trial and tribulations of Slobodan Milo‰eviç
  45. Review Essay: In search of the ‘real’ Milošević: new books about the rise and fall of Serbia’s strongman
  46. Gender Reversals and Gender Cultures
  47. Views from Inside: Memoirs concerning the Yugoslav Breakup and War
  48. The so-called right of national self-determination and other myths
  49. Revisiting the Horrors of Bosnia: New Books about the War
  50. Introduction
  51. Evil and the obsolescence of state sovereignty
  52. Kosovo: A liberal approach
  53. Eastern Europe's Unfinished Business
  54. UFOs over Russia and Eastern Europe
  55. Profit motives in secession
  56. Democratization in Slovenia – the second stage
  57. The Croatian Catholic Church since 1990
  58. Nationalism and the ‘idiocy’ of the countryside: The case of Serbia
  59. The Reemergence of Slovakia
  60. The Yugoslav Crisis and the West: Avoiding “Vietnam” and Blundering into “Abyssinia”
  61. Slovenia's road to democracy
  62. Religious Policy in the Soviet Union
  63. Religious policy in the era of Gorbachev
  64. War in the Balkans
  65. The catholic church in Czechoslovakia 1948–1991
  66. Protestantism in East Germany, 1949–1989: A summing up
  67. The Rock Scene in Yugoslavia
  68. Disaffection and Dissent in East Germany
  69. Political Struggle and Institutional Reorganization in Yugoslavia
  70. KANTIAN AND HEGELIAN PERSPECTIVES ON DUTY
  71. Civic Virtues, Liberal Values, and the Civic Culture
  72. Religious Organizations in Post-Communist Central and Southeastern Europe
  73. The Catholic Church in Post-Communist Poland
  74. Debates about the war
  75. „Dein Wille geschehe“: Zum Verhältnis zwischen katholischer Kirche und Politik in Polen seit 1989