Genocidal violence in the former Yugoslavia: Bosnia Herzegovina
TítuloGenocidal violence in the former Yugoslavia: Bosnia Herzegovina
Autor
Edición4th edition
Call number364.151/0024
Número del objeto10022n
Lugar de publicaciónNew York, New York, United States
EditorialRoutledge
Año de publicación
2013
Paginaciónpp477-511
MaterialArticle
ISBN9780415871921
NotesArticle from the book 'Centuries of genocide: essays and eyewitness accounts' pp477-511
Descripción
In the 1990s the multi-ethnic, Federal Republic of Yugoslavia dissolved into several wars with far more than two million people displaced and tens of
thousands killed. Yugoslavia's descent into war and genocidal violence began in 1991, when the republic of Slovenia and the republic of Croatia declared their independence. The conflict lasted 7 months and included the deliberate destruction of towns and cities, massacres of civilians and the forcible removal of ethnic groups from their territory. This sort of campaign came to be known as 'ethnic cleansing' - a term that tells little of the horror inflicted upon affected civilians