
Articles published in Eurozine
Memory of war crimes: Can victims speak?
The editor of the Belgrade Circle Journal writes that Milosevic was guilty not only because he led a collective criminal enterprise, but also because he demanded that ethnic justice nest in sovereign national law, which he turned against international law. [more]
Moral responsibility for collective crime
Transitional justice in the former Yugoslavia
The success of the process of transition in the former Yugoslavia depends on adequately responding to the question of responsibility for crimes committed in the name of a people. [more]
Declaration of the obligation of the state of Serbia...
The declaration submitted to the Serbian government by a group of Belgrade NGOs, urging that guilt for war crimes be officially and publicly acknowledged. [more]
Srebrenica: Between denial and recognition
Recent footage showing murders taking place at Srebrenica has proved a catalyst for a change in the attitudes of the Serbian public towards Serbian war crimes. [more]
The dark intimacy: maps, identities, acts of identifications
To what extent have the Balkans been constructed as a negative mirrordiscourse to European identity? [more]
Muslim women, Croatian women, Serbian women, Albanian women...
Examining attitudes towards rape: The Balkan wars. [more]
Invention and in(ter)vention: The rhetoric of Balkanization
Vesna Goldsworthy looks at how Western commentators romanticize the Balkans' history of alleged bloodshed, feudal hatreds and perpetual war. How can these myths be debunked? [more]
Articles published in the partner section
Cosmopolitan friendship
In memoriam Jacques Derrida (1930-2004)
Obrad Savic expresses his respect for a cosmopolitan friend who never kept his political and moral passion separate from theoretical reflection. [more]





















