by Anastasia Robinson | Nov 2, 2025 | University of Georgia
When Vladimir Putin met with Milorad Dodik at a diplomatic forum in Sochi on October 2, 2025, he greeted him as “President Dodik.” This moment drew attention because two weeks prior, after months of resisting arrest for refusing to comply with а mandated removal,...
by Ari Antar | Nov 24, 2023 | Northeastern University
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the fall of Yugoslavia, many nations abandoned their communist alliances and ideologies, and flocked to Western alliances they believed would revitalize their suffering societies. The United States in particular saw...
by Amanda Tompkins | Mar 12, 2021 | Northeastern University
The Balkan Wars of the 1990s was a period that saw destruction of institutions, corruption of the media, extreme polarization, and genocide in Bosnia. Following a February 29 referendum, Bosnia & Herzegovina declared its independence on the 3rd of March 1992....
by Kevin Yang | Dec 9, 2020 | Williams College
In 1995, the Dayton Agreement ended the Bosnian War, establishing modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, a state explicitly structured by ethnic group. 25 years later, a strained peace persists, but ethnic polarization has only deepened. Sectarianism endures at the...