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Nation-states vs Nationless States
Conflict in the Former Yugoslavia
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Nation vs. State Nation: a group of people with a common culture living in one area State: an independent unit that controls it affairs, also known as a country Nation-state: when a nation and state are in the same place
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Stateless Nation Occurs when a group of people with a common culture do not have their own country.
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Is it possible to have a nation without a state?
YES! Examples: Palestinians Kurds Basques
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Label Your Map Use the outline Provided in your pack to
Label the following countries on your outline map: Albania, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, Slovenia, Kosovo
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Europe 1560
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Europe 1648
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Europe WWI
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Europe WWII
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Europe Cold War
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History Kingdoms of Serbia, Croats, and Slovenes united under the Serbian king after WWI Many ethnic groups and religions were brought together Serbs- Serbian Orthodox (Christian) Bosniak- Muslim Croat- Christian Slovene- Christian Albanian (Kosovo)- Muslim WWII Name was changed to Yugoslavia- “Land of the Slavs”
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History- Tito’s Yugoslavia
Josip Bros Tito- became dictator of Yugoslavia (communist)- forced Germany out Promoted Yugoslav nationalism Brought political stability Suppressed ethnic tensions Died in 1980
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Yugoslavia Begins to Crumble
After Tito’s death- leadership rotated between presidents of the republics in Yugoslavia- Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia Wanted to help their own republics at the expense of Yugoslavia as a whole Economic instability- foreign debt
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Stable Past? Understanding Yugoslavia Before the Genocide
Before the Genocide
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Ethnic Makeup Ethnic Makeup Religious Makeup
Bosnia 48% Bosniak 40% Muslim 37% Serb 31% Orthodox Christian 14.3% Croat 15% Catholic Croatia 89.6% Croat 88% Catholic 4.5% Serb % Orthodox Christian 1.3% Muslim Serbia 83% Serb 85% Serbian Orthodox 4% Hungarian 5.5% Catholic 1.4% Romany 3.2% Muslim 1.1% Yugoslav 1.1% Bosniak Macedonia 64% Macedonian 65% Macedonian Orthodox 25% Albanian 33% Muslim 3.9% Turk
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Ethnic Makeup Ethnic Makeup Religion
Montenegro 43% Montenegrin Religious data not available 32 % Serbian 8% Bosniak 5% Albania Kosovo 88% Albanians 90% Muslim 8% Kosovo Serbs Serbian Orthodox 4% other ethnic groups. Roman Catholic Slovenia 83% Slovene 58% Roman Catholic 2% Serb 2% Muslim 2% Croat 2% Orthodox 1%Bosnian 12% Other or undeclared
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Slobodan Milosevic 1986- Slobodan Milosevic (Serb) came to power
Promoted Serbian nationalism and the creation of a Greater Serbia- offended non-Serbs Led to declarations of independence, War in Croatia, War in Bosnia, and War in Kosovo June Slovenia and Croatia (Serb minority) declared independence November Macedonia declared independence March Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serb minority) declared independence
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War in Croatia Croatia purged the public administration of all Serbs- offended Serbs, reminded them of WWII when Croats helped Nazis killed them. Hostilities led to war Yugoslav’s Army supported Serbs- took control of 1/3 of Croatia and killed many Many Serbs were killed or fled the area UN negotiated a cease fire in 1992 1995- Croatia reclaimed land; war ended; UN aid
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War in Bosnia After declaration of independence, Serbs (large minority) launched a war to stop it Ethnic cleansing- Serbs killed Bosnians and Croats- tried to eliminate ethnic group NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization- military alliance) began air strikes against Serbs 1995- cease-fire and peace treaty- Bosnia remained independent
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War in Kosovo Milosevic tried to gain complete control of Kosovo and wipe out non- Serb ethnic groups- mainly Albanian here Kosovo Liberation Army (KLO) fought back 1998- ethnic cleansing escalated- U.S., U.K. and others imposed economic sanctions- didn’t stop killings 1999- NATO launched air strikes- led to a peace treaty Declared independence in 2008 from Serbia- only 85 countries recognize it; Serbia does not
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Conflict Warning, the following video contains graphic information. Viewer Discretion is Advised.
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Response to Conflict International Response to the Genocide United Nations Response NY Times article: "UN Will Add NATO Troops to Bosnia Force"
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Aftermath After the Bosnian Genocide: Article: Are there similarities between Syria today and Bosnia in the 1990's?
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