Tone Bringa
The international community has invested billions of dollars in trying to restore Bosnia-Herzegovina as a functioning multiethnic state and society. A great deal of effort and research has gone into the design of programs to bring together divided communities. There is, however, very little understanding of how ordinary people in the affected communities cope. This is why Peacebuilding in the Balkans should be read by those making and implementing policy in Bosnia and the Western Balkans. Paula M. Pickering analyzes how the postwar reality in Bosnia affected the attitudes of ordinary citizens from minority groups toward members of the dominant ethnic group in their community.
From the Publisher
This detailed study of Bosnia explores one of the most pressing challenges facing the international community today—how to rebuild societies following bloody civil wars.... While much of the literature on post-conflict reconstruction... tends to focus on political elites, Picker focuses instead on how ordinary people respond to peace building projects designed largely without their input. The author bases her conclusions about how ordinary people—through ordinary, everyday actions—affect the success of post-conflict peace building programs on years of fieldwork and numerous interviews with Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs. She supplements this rich, ethnographic data with quantitative analysis of ordinary people's attitudes toward other ethnic groups, political life, and institutions as well as voting patterns to present a complex picture of post-conflict Bosnian society.
Francine Friedman
Peacebuilding in the Balkans, the result of several years of on-site investigation and interviews, gives the reader an understanding of the situation with the added dimension of the use of the interviewees' own words.