Kurzbeschreibung
In one of the first studies to look at how the Yugoslav wars are understood in Serbian culture, Eric Gordy examines the legacy that confronted the country when Slobodan Milošević was forced out of power in 2000, assessing where transitional justice has achieved its goals, where it has not, and why it matters.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface
Chapter 1. Guilt and Responsibility: Problems, History, and Law
Chapter 2. The Formation of Public Opinion: Serbia in 2001
Chapter 3. Moment I: The Leader Is Not Invincible
Chapter 4. Approaches to Guilt
Chapter 5. Moment II: The Djindjić Murder, from Outrage to Confusion
Chapter 6. Denial, Avoidance, Shifts of Context: From Denial to Responsibility in Eleven Steps
Chapter 7. Moment III: The "Scorpions" and the Refinement of Denial
Chapter 8. Nonmoments: Milošević, Karadžić, Šešelj, and Mladić
Chapter 9. Politics and Culture in Approaching the Past
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Beschreibung
When the regime led by Slobodan Miloevi came to an end in October 2000, expectations for social transformation in Serbia and the rest of the Balkans were high. The international community declared that an era of human rights had begun, while domestic actors hoped that the conditions that had made a violent dictatorship possible could be eliminated. More than a decade after the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia initiated the process of bringing violators of international humanitarian law to justice, significant legal precedents and facts have been established, yet considerable gaps in the historical record, along with denial and disagreements, continue to exist in the public memory of the Yugoslav wars.Guilt, Responsibility, and Denial sets out to trace the political, social, and moral challenges that Serbia faced from 2000 onward, offering an empirically rich and theoretically broad account of what was demanded of the country's citizens as well its political leadershipand how these challenges were alternately confronted and ignored. Eric Gordy makes extensive use of Serbian media to capture the internal debate surrounding the legacy of the country's war crimes, providing one of the first studies to examine international institutional efforts to build a set of public memories alongside domestic Serbian political reaction. By combining news accounts, courtroom transcripts, online discussions, and his own field research, Gordy explores how the conflicts and crimes that were committed under Miloevi came to be understood by the people of Serbia and, more broadly, how projects of transitional justice affect the ways society faces issues of guilt and responsibility. In charting the legal, political, and cultural forces that shape public memory, Guilt, Responsibility, and Denial promises to become a standard resource for studies of Serbia as well as the workings of international and domestic justice in dealing with the aftermath of war crimes.