Nel novembre 1995, con l’Accordo di Dayton, veniva posto fine alla guerra in Bosnia Erzegovina. La soluzione adottata a Dayton, con le sue contraddizioni tra cui il riconoscimento de facto della pulizia etnica - nasceva come frutto del compromesso per ottenere la pace. Ora, in un paese vittima di una continua emorragia di giovani che emigrano in cerca di futuro, appare evidente che senza una sua riforma la Bosnia Erzegovina rischia di restare uno stato disfunzionale che non riuscirà a procedere verso l’integrazione europea. Un nostro dossier
Notizie, approfondimenti, multimedia
INTERVIEW Bosnia and Herzegovina, from ethnocracy to feasible reforms
Alfredo Sasso | 14/1/202125 years after Dayton, Bosnia and Herzegovina discusses the discriminatory nature of its constitution and its possible reform, but also possible alternatives for a change in the country's institutional system. We talked about it with Nenad Stojanović
The 1425 days of Sarajevo
9/12/2020The General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina, signed at the military base in Dayton, Ohio, on 21 November and then formalised in Paris on 14 December 1995, decreed the end of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The capital, Sarajevo, was held under siege for 1452 days, from 6 April 1992 to 29 February 1996. The story of those years in photographs, courtesy of photographer and journalist Mario Boccia to OBCT
ANALYSIS The elections of 1990, the year zero of Bosnian ethnocracy
Alfredo Sasso | 19/11/2020There is one case in which inter-nationalist cooperation manifested in an electoral process: that of Bosnia and Herzegovina on November 18th, 1990. The first multi-party elections after the socialist era saw the triumph of the three parties on an ethnic basis
ANALYSIS Bosnia and Herzegovina, institutions blocked at the Dayton market
Alfredo Sasso | 27/2/2020Milorad Dodik – current member of the tripartite state presidency – has launched the RS-Exit for the secession of Republika Srpska from Bosnia and Herzegovina. For some, yet another bluff; for others, a dangerous sign. Collaterally, the Constitutional Court is under attack