Articles with "former yugoslavia" as a keyword



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Peace on the Small Screen: UNPROFOR’s Television Unit in 1994–5 and the ‘Media War’ in Former Yugoslavia

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Published in 2021 at "Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television"

DOI: 10.1080/01439685.2021.1948205

Abstract: Between early 1994 and the end of the wars in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, a team of journalists working for the United Nations peacekeeping mission in former Yugoslavia (UNPROFOR) was in charge... read more here.

Keywords: screen unprofor; peace small; small screen; television ... See more keywords
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Does Language Foster Reconciliation? Evidence From the Former Yugoslavia

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Published in 2022 at "Journal of Conflict Resolution"

DOI: 10.1177/00220027211065416

Abstract: Despite a surge in research on post-conflict reconciliation, the specific factors which promote reconciliation remain a subject of debate. In particular, the possible role of shared language in fostering reconciliation has received little scholarly attention.… read more here.

Keywords: language foster; reconciliation; former yugoslavia; language ... See more keywords
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Political Complexities of Ethnochoreological Research: The Facets of Scholarly Work on Dance in the Countries of Former Yugoslavia

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Published in 2020 at "Acta Ethnographica Hungarica"

DOI: 10.1556/022.2020.00002

Abstract: As independent scholarly discipline grounded in folkloristics, ethnochoreology was predominantly founded within the state institutions of the socialist regime of former Yugoslavia after World War II and was consequently molded theoretically and methodologically in accordance… read more here.

Keywords: research; ethnochoreological research; dance; former yugoslavia ... See more keywords
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Collective Memory of a Dissolved Country: Group-Based Nostalgia and Guilt Assignment as Predictors of Interethnic Relations Between Diaspora Groups From Former Yugoslavia.

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Published in 2018 at "Journal of Social and Political Psychology"

DOI: 10.5964/jspp.v5i2.733

Abstract: In this study we examined intergroup relations between immigrants of different ethnic backgrounds (Croats, Serbs, and Bosniaks) originating from the same conflict area (former Yugoslavia) and living in the same host country (Australia). For these… read more here.

Keywords: collective memory; group; guilt assignment; former yugoslavia ... See more keywords