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Why is Bosnia a Failure? Comparing Theories of International State-building
Del 02/10/2009 al 02/10/2009; London (Graham Wallas Room, 5th Floor, Main Building, London School of Economics) (Reino Unido).
Centre for the Study of Global Governance and LSEE public lecture

Why is Bosnia a Failure? Comparing Theories of International State-building

Date: Friday 2 October 2009
Time: 6pm
Venue: Graham Wallas Room, 5th Floor, Main Building, London School of Economics
Speaker: Susan Woodward
Chair: Professor Kevin Featherstone

Fourteen years since the signing of the Dayton Accord, the "General Framework for Peace" in Bosnia-Herzegovina, there is an emerging consensus that the international state-building agenda in Bosnia has failed. This consensus also follows 14 years of academic studies that are almost uniformly critical of international policies. The explanations for failure vary, however. What are they? What evidence do they offer? What lessons does each draw for other international state-building missions since 1995? Is Bosnia a failure?

Susan Woodward is Professor at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. She was a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC, 1990-1999, and at King's College London, 1999-2000, head of the Assessment and Analysis Unit of UNPROFOR, 1994, and on the faculty of Yale University, Williams College, Mount Hollyoke College, and Northwestern University from 1972-1989.Her writings include Balkan Tragedy: Chaos and Dissolution after the Cold War (Brookings Press 1995) and Socialist Unemployment: The Political Economy of Yugoslavia, 1945-1990 (Princeton University Press, 1995).
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