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OverviewCan Europe tame the Balkans? That’s the question veteran journalist Elizabeth Pond addresses in this timely and absorbing book. Starting with the wars of the Yugoslav succession, Endgame in the Balkans guides readers through the region’s tumultuous recent history and explores both how the lure of European Union (EU) membership has affected the Balkans and how Balkan developments have shaped the EU. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Elizabeth PondPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Brookings Institution Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.40cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.042kg ISBN: 9780815771609ISBN 10: 0815771606 Pages: 300 Publication Date: 26 September 2006 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Awaiting stock Table of ContentsReviewsShe is extraordinarily knowledgeable, and after a while the sheer volume of her information begins to cast a hypnotic spell. - Barry Gewen, New York Times Book Review, 12/17/2006 Elizabeth Pond, in her survey of the Balkans and EU integration, considers not only the former Yugoslavia but also its neighborhood in her excellent survey of the state of scholarship on the entire region since the fall of communism. She has carefully sifted through the best political analyses available and pulled them together country by country. - Nicholas Whyte, Internationale Politik, 4/1/2007 As in her previous books, Elizabeth Pond comes across as an analyst with a sharp intellect and a lucid judgement, but also as a seasoned journalist who takes us on a journey to relive both the tragedies and the successes of Balkan politics. - International Affairs, 3/1/2007 Offers a well-informed comparative analysis of those parts of the Balkans that enjoyed an uneasy peace and therefore got the change to find a place on the European integration train and the victims of warfare whose place in the new Europe is still hard to determine... Elizabeth Pond is to be congratulated for providing a vivid and detailed portrait of the region's politics and role in international relations which is sure to be widely used by international officials needing an accessible compendium to make some sense of the Balkans. - Tom Gallagher, University of Bradford, SEER Pond, as a highly experienced journalist with good judgment and an incorruptible eye for the truth, does not draw this upbeat conclusion lightly; she painstakingly details the waste, corruption and persistence of organized crime across the region, and for each optimistic interpretation of events, she also produces a dark mirror image. - Survival She is extraordinarily knowledgeable, and after a while the sheer volume of her information begins to cast a hypnotic spell. - Barry Gewen, New York Times Book Review, 12/17/2006 Elizabeth Pond, in her survey of the Balkans and EU integration, considers not only the former Yugoslavia but also its neighborhood in her excellent survey of the state of scholarship on the entire region since the fall of communism. She has carefully sifted through the best political analyses available and pulled them together country by country. - Nicholas Whyte, Internationale Politik, 4/1/2007 As in her previous books, Elizabeth Pond comes across as an analyst with a sharp intellect and a lucid judgement, but also as a seasoned journalist who takes us on a journey to relive both the tragedies and the successes of Balkan politics. - International Affairs, 3/1/2007 Offers a well-informed comparative analysis of those parts of the Balkans that enjoyed an uneasy peace and therefore got the change to find a place on the European integration train and the victims of warfare whose place in the new Europe is still hard to determine... Elizabeth Pond is to be congratulated for providing a vivid and detailed portrait of the region's politics and role in international relations which is sure to be widely used by international officials needing an accessible compendium to make some sense of the Balkans. - Tom Gallagher, University of Bradford, SEER Pond, as a highly experienced journalist with good judgment and an incorruptible eye for the truth, does not draw this upbeat conclusion lightly; she painstakingly details the waste, corruption and persistence of organized crime across the region, and for each optimistic interpretation of events, she also produces a dark mirror image. - Survival She is extraordinarily knowledgeable, and after a while the sheer volume of her information begins to cast a hypnotic spell. --Barry Gewen, New York Times Book Review, 12/17/2006 Elizabeth Pond, in her survey of the Balkans and EU integration, considers not only the former Yugoslavia but also its neighborhood in her excellent survey of the state of scholarship on the entire region since the fall of communism. She has carefully sifted through the best political analyses available and pulled them together country by country. --Nicholas Whyte, Internationale Politik, 4/1/2007 As in her previous books, Elizabeth Pond comes across as an analyst with a sharp intellect and a lucid judgement, but also as a seasoned journalist who takes us on a journey to relive both the tragedies and the successes of Balkan politics. -- International Affairs, 3/1/2007 This compelling account combines arresting country studies with incisive regional explanations and analysis. Pond does not shy away from assigning blame for the region's many misfortunes to both national and international actors. Yet her sympathetic portrait goes well beyond the gloom of the 1990s to offer an encouraging and persuasive vision of purposeful Europeanization against hard odds. --Thomas Carothers, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Offers a well-informed comparative analysis of those parts of the Balkans that enjoyed an uneasy peace and therefore got the change to find a place on the European integration train and the victims of warfare whose place in the new Europe is still hard to determine... Elizabeth Pond is to be congratulated for providing a vivid and detailed portrait of the region's politics and role in international relations which is sure to be widely used by international officials needing an accessible compendium to make some sense of the Balkans. --Tom Gallagher, University of Bradford, SEER This is vintage Pond at her best--always insightful, consistently fair-minded, and judicious. For anyone interested in the Balkan societies' recent quest for acceptance into the European Union, there is no better place to start than with this fine book. --Sabrina P. Ramet, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, author of The Three Yugoslavias A highly readable, intensively researched, people-centered portrait. The author offers us a sober, yet upbeat, prognosis of the Balkans' European destiny, if the many obstacles she cogently assesses can be surmounted. --Bowman Miller, Joint Military Intelligence College & former Director of Analysis for Europe, US Department of State Pond, as a highly experienced journalist with good judgment and an incorruptible eye for the truth, does not draw this upbeat conclusion lightly; she painstakingly details the waste, corruption and persistence of organized crime across the region, and for each optimistic interpretation of events, she also produces a dark mirror image. -- Survival A masterful survey of Europe's most turbulent region. Pond bases her refreshingly upbeat assessment on two dramatic transformations. The first is a palpable commitment by the people of southeastern Europe to overcome their history and push toward more democratic and tolerant societies. The second has been the determination of the West, particularly the EU, to abandon failed policies of Balkan containment in favor of integrating the region into the European mainstream. --Daniel Hamilton, Johns Hopkins University, former U.S. Special Coordinator for Southeast European Stabilization The Balkans have been buffeted by dramatic change since the end of the Cold War. Elizabeth Pond has produced a remarkable account of these developments and of the European Union's efforts to mold the 'crooked timber' of the region over the past decade. Meticulously researched, insightful, and compelling, this book deserves to be read widely and carefully. --Richard Caplan, Oxford University, author of Europe and the Recognition of New States in Yugoslavia Elizabeth Pond has written an excellent and comprehensive account of where the Balkans are now, and how they got there. Her book illustrates how progress is achieved: slowly, painfully, imperfectly, with many setbacks. This is a story of regime change as it really happens, and behind it lies the big but undefined idea of Europe. A timely and valuable contribution to contemporary history. --Robert Cooper, Director General for External & Politico-Military Affairs under EU High Representative Javier Solana She is extraordinarily knowledgeable, and after a while the sheer volume of her information begins to cast a hypnotic spell. --Barry Gewen, New York Times Book Review, 12/17/2006 Elizabeth Pond, in her survey of the Balkans and EU integration, considers not only the former Yugoslavia but also its neighborhood in her excellent survey of the state of scholarship on the entire region since the fall of communism. She has carefully sifted through the best political analyses available and pulled them together country by country. --Nicholas Whyte, Internationale Politik, 4/1/2007 As in her previous books, Elizabeth Pond comes across as an analyst with a sharp intellect and a lucid judgement, but also as a seasoned journalist who takes us on a journey to relive both the tragedies and the successes of Balkan politics. -- International Affairs, 3/1/2007 Offers a well-informed comparative analysis of those parts of the Balkans that enjoyed an uneasy peace and therefore got the change to find a place on the European integration train and the victims of warfare whose place in the new Europe is still hard to determine... Elizabeth Pond is to be congratulated for providing a vivid and detailed portrait of the region's politics and role in international relations which is sure to be widely used by international officials needing an accessible compendium to make some sense of the Balkans. --Tom Gallagher, University of Bradford, SEER Pond, as a highly experienced journalist with good judgment and an incorruptible eye for the truth, does not draw this upbeat conclusion lightly; she painstakingly details the waste, corruption and persistence of organized crime across the region, and for each optimistic interpretation of events, she also produces a dark mirror image. -- Survival <p> Pond, as a highly experienced journalist with good judgment and an incorruptible eye for the truth, does not draw this upbeat conclusion lightly; she painstakingly details the waste, corruption and persistence of organized crime across the region, and for each optimistic interpretation of events, she also produces a dark mirror image. -- Survival Author InformationElizabeth Pond is a journalist based in Germany. Currently a correspondent for the Washington Quarterly, she was a longtime European correspondent for the Christian Science Monitor. She is the author, most recently, of Friendly Fire: The Near-Death of the Transatlantic Alliance (Brookings, 2003) and The Rebirth of Europe (Brookings, revised 2002). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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