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The Politics of Serbia in the 1990s
 
 
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The Politics of Serbia in the 1990s [Paperback]

Robert Thomas (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0231113811 978-0231113816 January 15, 1999 0

In recent years, the contemporary Serbian political scene has been a much-discussed topic in the international media yet untangling the complicated web of parties and factions has become a more difficult task. Robert Thomas carefully examines the complexities of modern Serbian politics, largely in the words of the political players themselves. Drawing from a vast body of interviews and news coverage in Serbian and international media, Thomas brings the shifting political positions of these actors into sharp focus. The Politics of Serbia in the 1990s illuminates the chronic factionalism that has frustrated any attempt to unseat Slobodan Milosevic from the presidency. Opposition leaders have gone through many successive shifts in overall platform and specific tactical maneuvers, and this trend has made it difficult for them to launch a sustained, effective challenge to Milosevic. The Serbian president, meanwhile, emerges as a cunning manipulator of popular prejudices who has managed to retain power while leading the country into blundered wars and deepening economic distress. Dissecting Serb politics of the past decade, Thomas's study opens with a detailed overview of Serbian history and its communist years, and political dissent during this era. The book continues with in-depth explorations of such subjects as the fragmentation of Serb politics during the most deadly years of fighting in the region, the nation's fragile electoral politics at several critical moments, the alliance of radical and socialist groups and its rapid disintegration, and the aftermath of the Dayton accords. The author provides a complete list of abbreviations and a comprehensive index.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

A highly informed account of politics in Serbia from 1987 to 1998.

(Foreign Affairs )

A superb and detailed compilation on the complex nature of Serbian politics during the 1990s.

(CHOICE )

Thomas has been following the minutiae of Serbian politics for the past decade, and has produced what must be the most detailed and authoritative account of that subject in any language.... Readers... will be rewarded with an insight into many of the secrets of Milosevic's political success.

(Noel Malcolm The Sunday Telegraph (London) )

Robert Thomas's detailed book demonstrates superbly the techniques that Milosevic uses to outwit his opponents in both domestic and foreign policy.

(Misha Glenny The Observer (London) )

About the Author

Robert Thomas teaches politics in the School of East European Studies at the University of London.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Columbia University Press (January 15, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0231113811
  • ISBN-13: 978-0231113816
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,659,875 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Incomplete, June 9, 2000
This review is from: The Politics of Serbia in the 1990s (Paperback)
Given the immense amount of research and effort the author put into this book, I'd like to give it a more positive evaluation. This is a very detailed, almost exhaustive account of Serbian political events and conflicts during the 1990s (up to mid-1998). In many ways it serves as a useful reference guide - but only for those already familiar with the complexities of politics in the former Yugoslavia. This is perhaps the book's central flaw: it seems to assume that readers will already have a handle on events and politics in Yugoslavia as a whole during the late 1980s, as well as the wartime events during the early 1990s in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, so that the author just rambles on about the political tug-of-war going on among various Serbian politicians and political parties. At times Thomas spends too much time discussing the squabbles between the leaders of Serbia's largely ineffective opposition parties, while ignoring the overall political, social and economic situation in Serbia. Thus there is little discussion of the growth of organized crime as the Serbian economy flagged under the burden of international sanctions nor, crucially, of the ensuing close ties and collaboration between mob leaders and the political elite. Also, and quite strangely, there is relatively little discussion or in-depth analysis of perhaps the most important figure in Serbian politics for the last fifteen years: Slobodan Milosevic. Other than some very general analysis in his introduction and conclusion, Milosevic is otherwise treated by Thomas as some sort of gray eminence of Serbian politics, always pulling the levers, but rarely seen. Therefore, this book is disappointing in many ways. One can only hope that if the author decides to do a revised edition to cover the events of 1999 (the Kosovo crisis and the NATO air strikes) he will also thoroughly rework the entire text.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good blow-by-blow of Serbian politics in the 90s, August 30, 2000
By 
Frank Sellin "political scientist" (Charlottesville, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Politics of Serbia in the 1990s (Paperback)
Thomas does an excellent job of treating the blow-by-blow behavior of Serbia's political leaders in the 1990s. As a political scientist researching the Balkans, I rely on this book heavily to recall who did what to whom when.

I second some of the comments made by an earlier reviewer (Bosnar?). The book does presume some deeper knowledge of the players in Serbian politics (and, happily, pays attention as well to plenty of 'lieutenants'.) While it summarizes some of the context involving economic difficulties, the paramilitarization of some semi-political groupings, and relationships between Serbs in Serbia proper and Bosnian Serbs, it does tend to treat parties somewhat in isolation from their environmental context. It is also emphatically not a biography of Slobodan Milosevic, although it mentions some of the events surrounding his rise in the early days. (Nearly everything you've read on Milosevic's biography in any English source most likely originated in the stunningly detailed works of Slavoljub Djukic, which are all in Serbian. I dearly hope somebody will put him in touch with a publisher who will translate him into English and give him the marketing boost he's missing in the West.)

Granted, some of the juiciest information is simply hard to obtain, particularly with regard to the "mafia-tization" of the state-dominated economy and the economic "reform" process in general. But that's where the real battle for power is all across the Balkans, and any treatment of parties in these countries must address the rewards they seek and sometimes achieve at any level of political power. This is particularly the case for Serbia, where political control over the new business class is the tightest, and sometimes the most deadly. Given Thomas' great familiarity with parties and their primary leaders, one would think he wields at least a passing level of familiarity of the political battles for economic power in Serbia. Certainly any later update of this book should reflect the post-Zajedno scene on this score, as the regime's latest maneuverings emphasize how worried they are about electoral loss while they attempt to cushion any potential fall by shifting their power into the economic realm, i.e., into the nests they've feathered for 10 years.

Note that this book, while good about reporting electoral results, will not be sufficient in and of itself for those doing or seeking more in-depth electoral behavior studies. It also tends to emphasize the rhetoric of political leaders--sometimes striking and self-explanatory in itself--again, for knowledgeable readers--but not always examined or probed for its validity or intent. Still, one has to be impressed with Thomas' assiduous collection of the Serbian press (back when it was functioning semi-normally), and he does a very good job when it comes to interpretation of some of the gaps.

The introductory chapter raises some interesting conceptual points, but really does not provide a tight, convincing methodological argument despite some attempt at appearances. One should realize that Thomas hails from a more British/European orientation of political science, resulting in a more narrative/chronological story as opposed to rigorously developed argumentation. For example, you will get an excellent description of the bitter internecine warfare among opposition leaders, but not an explanation as to why.

I don't mean to slight the book overmuch: we need good, well-researched description as a necessary foundation before we can attempt more convincing causal theories, and Thomas gives us a wealth of excellent material on the case of Serbia. It's an essential work for observers of contemporary Balkan politics, whether political scientists, journalists, or interested laypeople, and that's why I give it four stars.

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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An important book on Serbia and former Yugoslavia, September 16, 1999
This review is from: The Politics of Serbia in the 1990s (Paperback)
Despite the array of books published on former Yugoslavia in recent years, only few have dealt with Serbia, although politics in Serbia have clearly determined the wars in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo. The book by Thomas is surprisingly balanced and loaded with facts hard to come by eleswhere. Although a more analytical approach might be desirable, the chronological account of Serbian politics is useful for anybody researching of former Yugoslavia and a "must" for those working on Serbia.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In the late 1980s and early 1990s the Communist governments which had dominated political life in Central and Eastern Europe since the end of the the Second World War were overthrown, collapsed or negotiated themselves out of power. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
jni telegraf, media blockade, winter protests, paramilitary volunteers, police special forces, opposition supporters, other opposition parties, favourable coverage, other opposition groups, city assembly
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Republika Srpska, Bosnian Serb, Slobodan Milosevic, Vuk Draskovic, Prime Minister, Banja Luka, Zoran Djindjic, New Democracy, Vojislav Seselj, Serbian Guard, Belgrade University, Ravna Gora, Kosovo Serbs, Main Committee, Banta Luka, League of Communists, Radovan Karadzic, Serbian President, Second World War, Vojislav Kostunica, United States, Eastern Europe, Kosta Cavoski, Vesna Pesic, Dobrica Cosic
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