Whose line is it anyway? : understanding the military role in delivering rights based policies in post-conflict territories
The post-conflict territories of the Western Balkans have been subjected to an unprecedented level of international attention since the mid-1990s. The EU, NATO and OSCE in particular converged on the region intent on redefining their image - if not purpose - in the first major crisis of the post-Col...
Main Author: | Marley, Jonathan M. |
---|---|
Published: |
London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London)
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.694193 |
Similar Items
-
State building: the case of the European Union's common foreign and security policy
by: Harrold, Jane Elizabeth
Published: (2001) -
The EU's potential for domestic change beyond its borders : examining effective cooperation between EU civilian missions and host countries in the Eastern Neighbourhood
by: Dobrescu, Mădălina
Published: (2015) -
European sanctions reconsidered : regime type, strategic bargaining, and the imposition of EU sanctions
by: Guijarro Usobiaga, Borja
Published: (2015) -
The impact of the Central and Eastern European EU member states on the EU's foreign policy, 2004 to 2013
by: Hellmeyer, Monika
Published: (2014) -
European foreign policy and the European Parliament in the 1990s : an investigation into the role and voting behaviour of the European Parliament's political groups
by: Viola, Donatella
Published: (1999)