1st Edition

Kosovo and the Collateral Effects of Humanitarian Intervention

By Jaume Castan Pinos Copyright 2019
204 Pages
by Routledge

204 Pages 16 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

204 Pages 16 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Humanitarian intervention is rising ever higher in international relations discourse, with many publications exploring the nature, legality and success of these interventions. However, less attention is given to what happens after an intervention. This book looks in particular at the implications for territorial and border relations, exploring the case of Kosovo, which in many ways can be seen as... Read more

Introduction







1. From secessionist challenge to armed insurgency: examining the spiral of violence in Kosovo prior to 1999









2. Coercive diplomacy: Humanitarian intervention and its controversies in Kosovo









3. Quasi-independence: The political and territorial impact of Humanitarian Intervention









4. Curtailed sovereignty: The complexities of consolidating the territorial transformation









5. The problem of the North and the potential for further border transformations in Kosovo









6. Kosovo beyond Kosovo: the collateral effects on other territorial conflicts







Conclusion

Biography

Jaume Castan Pinos works as an Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science and Public Management, University of Southern Denmark. He holds a Ph.D. in International Politics (Queen's University Belfast, 2011). He is the Director of the European Studies Bachelor programme at the University of Southern Denmark. His academic interests are framed by ethno-territorial conflicts, sovereignty and political violence. He has conducted extensive research in Catalonia, North Africa and former Yugoslavia.

"Geopolitics isn’t just the manoeuvres of great powers and Castan Pinos highlights the geopolitics of peripheral conflicts by focusing on NATO’s ‘humanitarian’ intervention in Kosovo. An artful blend of regional expertise and political theory, Castan Pinos’s latest book is a must-read for those interested in how geopolitics actually works."Steven M. Radil, Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Idaho, USA

"Castan Pinos’s study of the "collateral consequences" of NATO’s intervention in Yugoslavia and the subsequent Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence offers a timely and important examination into the ad hoc approaches to conflict resolution to one of the last open-ended conflicts in the Balkans. Challenging assumptions that Kosovo’s statehood is sui generis, this work links moral imperatives for humanitarian intervention with strategic policies of Realpolitik."Michael Rossi, Lecturer, Department of Politics, Rutgers University, USA