Bosnia in Limbo

Testimonies from the Drina River



Table of contents
Bosnia in Limbo
Testimonies from the Drina River
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About the book

Details

To this day, almost all narratives on Bosnia focus on the 1990s, the war, and the labyrinth that Dayton’s institutional system represents. They also tend to be imbued with a perspective that often overdoes the ethnic and religious element. The truth is that, beyond the causes of war and its manifold tragedies, we actually know very little of its forgotten consequences, once the CNN effect is long gone. As importantly, we know very little of Bosnia today: a society shaped by the past, yes, but also exposed to shifting 21st century dynamics. A society haunted not only by war tragedies but also by a long-standing and long overlooked social crisis. This revealing book thus tries to provide a somewhat different picture of Bosnia, twenty years after the war. Largely based on the author’s experience in the field, it is to some extent an account of rural Bosnia, in particular of the Drina River Valley, which bore the brunt of the ethnic cleansing in the 1990s. Yet, and starting off from that isolated region of open wounds, unfinished issues and a cast of characters that range from displaced persons and victims to committed women, the book aims to overall provide a portrait of modern Bosnia as such, while also looking critically at the workings of the international community and European diplomacy. The book, with its landscape of activists, Western diplomats, and an underground world in Sarajevo for LGBT and youths, shows a country of so far failed Springs and leaders who go on with their bad governance. Meanwhile the “Europe” towards which Bosnia theoretically moves, drifting between a poor understanding of the country, a fear of conflict that acts as its Achilles’ heel, as well as lack of genuine interest, seems unable to really change things. In a way, therefore, a country in limbo.
The author

About the author

Francisco de Borja Lasheras (San Sebastián, Spain, 1981) spent several years in the Balkans, working on human rights in Bosnia-Herzegovina with the OSCE mission there, and then with the mission in Albania. He previously served at the Spanish Delegation to the OSCE in Vienna. Until February 2018, he was the director of the Office in Madrid of the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), a think tank. Currently, he is working for the office of the Spanish Prime Minister. He splits his time between Spain, EU capitals, the Balkans, and Ukraine; between politics, media, and civil society, and between writing and photography. A regular voice at El Mundo newspaper and other media, Borja graduated summa cum laude from the University of Deusto and also holds a master’s degree from Harvard University in International Relations.
Reviews

Reviews

"A thrilling, vivid reportage rich in analysis—and vice versa."—María Antonia Sánchez-Vallejo, Babelia, El País, May 2017

"An extensive reportage on Bosnia and its problems; an essay on the consequences of war; a personal and passionate description of a trade, with elements of almost a Wild West movie, including a gallery of portraits of the region's inhabitants...and the difficulties on the ground to modernise the country."—Daniel Gascón, Letras Libres, March 2017

"An essay which interest lies in something a bit difficult to find in these days of effervescence and ideological packs: doubts."—Álvaro González Esteban, Jot Down

"a powerful blending of personal experience and historical and cultural context, exploring how the world does remembrance and reconciliation – or fails to"—Robert Wilton, London Magazine
Additional Information

Additional Information

Delivery time 2-3 Tage / 2-3 days
Author Borja Lasheras, Carlos Westendorp y Cabeza
Number of pages 126
Language English
Publication date Mar 30, 2018
Weight (kg) 0.1630
ISBN-13 9783838211329