After Ethnic Cleansing: Return Outcomes in Bosnia-Herzegovina a Decade Beyond War. Tuathail, G., Ó. & O'Loughlin, J. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 99(5):1045-1053, 2009.
Paper abstract bibtex Ethnic cleansing is a violent geopolitical practice designed to separate and segregate ethnic groups. This paper describes both the war aims which justified ethnic cleansing in Bosnia-Herzegovina and the effort by the international community to enable victims of ethnic cleansing to return to their homes. It considers the trends and geography of population returns ten years after the war before presenting original survey research results on displacement and return experiences. An overwhelming majority of Bosnians reclaimed their pre-war property and a majority of these actually returned to their homes. Those self-identifying as Bosnian Serbs were more likely to sell their pre-war homes than other ethnic groups; they also tend to be less interested in multiethnicity. The poor were more likely to reclaim and return to live in their house than richer groups. Those with strong attachment to their home villages were more likely to return. But despite more than a million returns, nearly half of whom are officially minority returns, Bosnia continues to grapple with the divisive legacy of ethnic cleansing
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abstract = {Ethnic cleansing is a violent geopolitical practice designed to separate and segregate ethnic groups. This paper describes both the war aims which justified ethnic cleansing in Bosnia-Herzegovina and the effort by the international community to enable victims of ethnic cleansing to return to their homes. It considers the trends and geography of population returns ten years after the war before presenting original survey research results on displacement and return experiences. An overwhelming majority of Bosnians reclaimed their pre-war property and a majority of these actually returned to their homes. Those self-identifying as Bosnian Serbs were more likely to sell their pre-war homes than other ethnic groups; they also tend to be less interested in multiethnicity. The poor were more likely to reclaim and return to live in their house than richer groups. Those with strong attachment to their home villages were more likely to return. But despite more than a million returns, nearly half of whom are officially minority returns, Bosnia continues to grapple with the divisive legacy of ethnic cleansing},
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author = {Tuathail, Gearóid Ó and O'Loughlin, John},
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