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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper provides an overview. An annotated bibliography and bulleted timeline is included. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA918yug.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
fact, at this time, Yugoslavia was not a new territory. Rather, it was established in 1918 (Akhavan and Howse 32). Yet, the recent conflicts that have brought attention to the
region began during the late 1980s. Of course, there would be fighting for some years to come. In 1992, the European Community would recognize Croatia and Slovenia as separate
states (Heuvel and Siccama ix). At this juncture in history, Yugoslavia would be broken up into several sovereign states (Heuvel and Siccama ix). By the time that the year 1999
came to an end, only Montenegro and Serbia remained under the federation which was disintegrating further ("Western Intervention and the Disintegration of Yugoslavia" 1). As Serbia would lose control of
Kosovo, it would be weaker, and Montenegro sought further autonomy ("Western Intervention and the Disintegration of Yugoslavia" 1). The author comments: " The disintegration of Yugoslavia over the last
decade has been a bloody and protracted one" ("Western Intervention and the Disintegration of Yugoslavia" 1). Indeed, many people are familiar with the conflict because of the devastation that prompted
a slew of news reports. There was also American and European intervention in the region as a result. During the next four years, there would be a war in Bosnia-Herzegovina
that was highlighted and during the late 1990s, Kosovo would see armed conflicts that would culminate in a Nato bombing of both Montenegro and Serbia ("Western Intervention and the Disintegration
of Yugoslavia" 1). What was the cause of all the fighting? The author explains that the disintegration is located within the region known as the former Yugoslavia ("Western Intervention and
the Disintegration of Yugoslavia" 1). That is, there were "long standing ethnic differences" as well as territorial ambitions related to President Milosevic ("Western Intervention and the Disintegration of Yugoslavia" 1).
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