Description
Kosovo Divided analyses the legal system in place in Kosovo and shows how this unique legal and political system, where ethnicities have their own legal access, is highlighting and exacerbating ethnic tensions in Kosovo itself.
About the Author
Marius Calu is a lecturer specialising in the fields of Global Politics, Contemporary Security and Research Methods. He has worked at Regent's University London, King's College, UCL and Queen Mary, University of London. He earned his PhD in Political Science in 2015 and he has also completed an MRes in International Relations (Queen Mary, UoL) and a BA in Politics (University of London). He has undertaken research in the fields of International Relations, Comparative Politics and Nationalism Studies with a focus on contemporary norms and practices of post-conflict statebuilding and nationbuilding, the critical analysis of interventions and governance in multiethnic societies. As a research associate for LSE, he worked for the MAXCAP project in Serbia investigating the independence of the judiciary in the context of Europeanisation.
Reviews
By exposing the unintended consequences of the internationally engineered management of diversity that both weakened the state and hampered integration of minorities in post-conflict Kosovo, Calu makes a crucial and indispensable argument for examining the fatal gap between state-building templates and state-building practices. * Professor Anna Di Lellio, New York University, USA *
Marius Calu's empirically rich and theoretically robust analysis is a fascinating, and original contribution. By highlighting how the ambitious aspirations of liberal state-building floundered when implemented in Kosovo, Calu demonstrates that externally contrived policies designed to facilitate plurality and multi-ethnic harmony, had a series of unintended negative consequences. The book's findings have great relevance beyond Kosovo and should be read by all those interested in managing divergent identities within the modern state. * Dr Aidan Hehir, University of Westminster, UK *
This valuable work carefully analyses the gap between the rhetoric and practice of building a multi-ethnic Kosovo. Importantly, it goes beyond the Serbian community and considers other often overlooked groups, such as Roma, Ashkali and Bosniaks. This makes it a particularly welcome contribution to our understanding of contemporary Kosovo. * Professor James Ker-Lindsay, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK *
Book Information
ISBN 9781788315012
Author Marius-Ionut Calu
Format Hardback
Page Count 264
Imprint I.B. Tauris
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 542g