Academic literature on the topic 'Guerre au Kosovo (1998- )'
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Journal articles on the topic "Guerre au Kosovo (1998- )"
Tambarin, Marcel. "La paix au prix de la guerre ? L'Allemagne et l'intervention de l'OTAN au Kosovo (1998-1999)." Études Germaniques 254, no. 2 (2009): 471. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eger.254.0471.
Full textLafontaine, Annie. "Réfugié ou « Local Staff »?" Anthropologie et Sociétés 26, no. 1 (March 27, 2003): 89–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/000704ar.
Full textO’Meara, Dan, and Valeisha Sobhee. "Grande-Bretagne." Études internationales 35, no. 1 (June 8, 2004): 97–124. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/008449ar.
Full textFontanieu, Pierre, and Pierre Coste. "Guerre et paix au Kosovo et ailleurs ...." Autres Temps. Les cahiers du christianisme social 64, no. 1 (1999): 70–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/chris.1999.2167.
Full textRufin, Jean-Christophe. "Les humanitaires et la guerre du Kosovo." Le Débat 106, no. 4 (1999): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/deba.106.0003.
Full textIldefonse, Frédérique. "Kosovo : photographies d'Alain Keler, 1998, 1999." Vacarme 9, no. 3 (1999): 26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/vaca.009.0026.
Full textTroebst, Stefan. "The Kosovo War, Round One:1998." Comparative Southeast European Studies 48, no. 3-4 (March 1, 1999): 156–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/soeu-1999-483-403.
Full textNahoum-Grappe, Véronique. "Kosovo 1998-1999 : le sinistre ballet." Chimères 36, no. 1 (1999): 117–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/chime.1999.2282.
Full textHeinrich, Michael. "Kosovo 1999." PROKLA. Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft 29, no. 115 (June 1, 1999): 186–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.32387/prokla.v29i115.811.
Full textDufour, Pierre. "La non-violence et la guerre au Kosovo." Autres Temps. Les cahiers du christianisme social 67, no. 1 (2000): 11–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/chris.2000.2210.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Guerre au Kosovo (1998- )"
Krempl, Stefan. "Medien, Internet, Krieg : das Beispiel Kosovo : ein Beitrag zur kritischen Medienanalyse /." München : Fisher, 2004. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb410731273.
Full textZygojannis, Philipp A. "Die Staatengemeinschaft und das Kosovo : humanitäre Intervention und internationale Übergangsverwaltung unter Berücksichtigung einer Verpflichtung des Intervenienten zur Nachsorge /." Berlin : Duncker & Humblot, 2003. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb40045377x.
Full textBraem, Yann. "Géopolitique des relations militaires-humanitaires : comparaison des interventions au Kosovo et en Afghanistan." Paris 8, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA082873.
Full textThis geopolitical study deals with the territorial stakes of the relations between military and humanitarian actors. These two types of independant actors have been increasingly associated in international interventions. Analysis of the operations in Kosovo and Afghanistan shows the genesis of military-humanitarian and their role in the management and control of territories in crisis. It gives an understanding of how the relations are shaped by the geopolitical and geographical specificities of the the territories where the relations take place. A first part deals with the institutionnalisation dynamics of military-humanitarian relations in the management of conflict-torn territories. A second part focuses, in a comprehensive approach, on the interests and positions of both types of actors : armed forces on the one hand, humanitarian actors on the other
Rushiti, Arben. "La communauté internationale face à la crise du Kosovo : de l'éclatement de l'ex-Yougoslavie à l'intervention de l'OTAN (1991-1999)." Thesis, Université Grenoble Alpes (ComUE), 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018GREAH035.
Full textFrom the collapse of former Yugoslavia in 1991 to the rising tensions at the end of 1997, the crisis of Kosovo had not been sufficiently considered by the international community, which was preoccupied with the management of open conflicts in Croatia and Bosnia. However, the outbreak of the armed conflict in early 1998 pushed the international community to react in Kosovo. That reaction was both late and insufficient to achieve a diplomatic solution for the conflict. One of the research questions of this work was to determine whether a political and peaceful resolution of the conflict was indeed possible. If, before the armed conflict, everything was not attempted to prevent its outbreak, chances to find a political solution, once the hostilities began, were illusory. Therefore, all of the initiatives undertaken by the international community during 1998, and in early 1999, were to no avail.In absence of any diplomatic solution, NATO intervened militarily against the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, from March to June 1999. The reasons behind this intervention constitute another important question of this thesis. In this crisis, NATO seems to have undergone the evolution of the situation rather than precede and anticipate it. According to our hypothesis, the Atlantic Alliance was involved in the conflict hoping that, by its threats, would avoid the need for a military intervention; and when the intervention became inevitable, NATO believed it to be short. Waiting to put an end to the conflict through military force demonstration against Belgrade, NATO found itself engaged in a war that had to be carried to the end, because its own credibility was at stake. While other factors have also played an important role, the issue of credibility seems to us to have been the major element that triggered NATO's intervention, and as such became its driving force as the intervention prolongated and intensified progressively
Tatarchuk, Natalia. "La question du Kosovo et les grandes puissances européennes, des origines au printemps 1999." Thesis, Paris 1, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA01H009.
Full textKosovo is the disputed borderland between Serbia and Kosovo Albanians. The Serbs refer to Kosovo as the cradle of the Serb nation. The anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo Plain is the most important date in the Serbian national calendar. In 1981 there were major student protests in Pristina, followed by demands for Kosovo to be given republic status. The Serbian Communist leader S. Milosevic became president of Serbia in 1987 and in 1989 the Serbian parliament passed constitutional amendments reasserting Serbian control over Kosovo. In 1998 the Kosovo Liberation Anny unleashed a major guerrilla offensive. The conflict gained widespread international attention and was resolved with the intervention of the NATO
Haddad, Rayan. "Les processus d'insertion de conflits exogènes dans un espace public communautarisé : captations libanaises des crises du Kosovo, du 11 septembre, d'Afghanistan, et d'Irak." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007IEPP0044.
Full textThis research examines the adaptations of the Lebanese “post-anomic” public sphere to the world political context beyond the Westphalian coordinates. It highlights how the societal sphere of a Weak State deals with cases of “turbulence” emerging from the world scene. More specifically, it identifies the processes through which specific “exogenous” crises are incorporated into the “local” Lebanese debate. The intertwinement of the dynamics of “localization” and “globalization” is here clearly illustrated; but this does not preclude any attempt to assess (on a case by case basis) the relative and differing importance of these dynamics within the interaction. We have hence deemed useful to make a (loose) distinction between two concepts: Lebanese “sensitivity” (designating the “local” relation – not devoid of interest - to certain tumultuous international events) and Lebanese “vulnerability” (referring to the dangerous convulsions in Lebanon’s immediate environment). The former concept is predominantly (and processually) related to an efficient normative activism on the part of identity entrepreneurs in the “public sphere” (affected by a simultaneous crisis of state and civil society). The latter concept is foremost the consequence of the interplay of “geopolitical forces” that are not guided in their policy-making by considerations pertaining to fundamental human rights in the Middle East nor to the future of the region’s peoples. The two abovementioned concepts follow intertwined dynamics that we attempt to identify and explain through the analysis of the representations and the policies of various actors at the local and global levels
Jovanović, Miloš. "Légitimité et légitimation du recours à la force dans l'après-guerre froide : Étude de cas : l'intervention militaire de l'OTAN contre la République fédérale de Yougoslavie (1999)." Paris 1, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA010325.
Full textThibault, Simon, and Simon Thibault. "Les réformes des systèmes médiatiques de la Bosnie-Herzégovine et du Kosovo, et les approches des responsables internationaux chargés de les mettre en oeuvre." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/27951.
Full textThèse en cotutelle Université Laval, Québec, Canada et Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris – 3, Paris, France.
Durant les opérations de reconstruction qui ont eu lieu à la suite des conflits en Bosnie-Herzégovine (1992-1995) et au Kosovo (1998-1999), d’importants moyens ont été déployés par des organisations internationales pour réformer les espaces médiatiques bosnien et kosovar en vue de les dépolitiser. Ces réformes visaient notamment la création d’instances de réglementation des médias et la transformation du secteur de la radiodiffusion, qui s’avérait problématique en raison de la présence de médias relayant des discours incitant leur auditoire à la haine ethnique ou religieuse. Ces initiatives en matière de réglementation des médias et de réforme du secteur de la radiodiffusion ont nécessité des investissements considérables. Elles ont aussi généré des débats animés, qui ont révélé des divergences importantes entre les différents acteurs impliqués dans ces processus de réforme. En Bosnie, par exemple, l’élaboration de la loi relative au système de radiodiffusion publique a provoqué des échanges acrimonieux entre les responsables du Bureau du Haut Représentant et l’ambassade américaine. Au Kosovo, les initiatives de réglementation de la presse kosovare menées par l’OSCE et l’ONU ont été vivement critiquées par des ONG de défense de la presse qui les associaient à de la censure. Comment expliquer ces débats qui dévoilent différentes philosophies d’intervention en matière de réforme des médias? En procédant à une étude des théories normatives de la presse et de la littérature spécialisée, nous avons élaboré deux idéaux-types : l’« approche américaine » et l’« approche ouest-européenne ». Les caractéristiques de ces deux concepts idéal-typiques nous ont permis d’analyser les données recueillies durant notre recherche, incluant 50 entrevues, dont plusieurs avec des acteurs diplomatiques qui ont été au cœur de ces processus de réforme. Ce faisant, nous avons construit quatre propositions qui dévoilent les principales conclusions avancées dans cette thèse. Nous suggérons notamment que les approches des acteurs impliqués dans les processus de réforme des médias en Bosnie et au Kosovo peuvent être éclairées par certaines normes dominantes des environnements médiatiques aux États-Unis et en Europe de l’Ouest, ce qui permet une meilleure compréhension de leurs débats et leurs divergences.
Durant les opérations de reconstruction qui ont eu lieu à la suite des conflits en Bosnie-Herzégovine (1992-1995) et au Kosovo (1998-1999), d’importants moyens ont été déployés par des organisations internationales pour réformer les espaces médiatiques bosnien et kosovar en vue de les dépolitiser. Ces réformes visaient notamment la création d’instances de réglementation des médias et la transformation du secteur de la radiodiffusion, qui s’avérait problématique en raison de la présence de médias relayant des discours incitant leur auditoire à la haine ethnique ou religieuse. Ces initiatives en matière de réglementation des médias et de réforme du secteur de la radiodiffusion ont nécessité des investissements considérables. Elles ont aussi généré des débats animés, qui ont révélé des divergences importantes entre les différents acteurs impliqués dans ces processus de réforme. En Bosnie, par exemple, l’élaboration de la loi relative au système de radiodiffusion publique a provoqué des échanges acrimonieux entre les responsables du Bureau du Haut Représentant et l’ambassade américaine. Au Kosovo, les initiatives de réglementation de la presse kosovare menées par l’OSCE et l’ONU ont été vivement critiquées par des ONG de défense de la presse qui les associaient à de la censure. Comment expliquer ces débats qui dévoilent différentes philosophies d’intervention en matière de réforme des médias? En procédant à une étude des théories normatives de la presse et de la littérature spécialisée, nous avons élaboré deux idéaux-types : l’« approche américaine » et l’« approche ouest-européenne ». Les caractéristiques de ces deux concepts idéal-typiques nous ont permis d’analyser les données recueillies durant notre recherche, incluant 50 entrevues, dont plusieurs avec des acteurs diplomatiques qui ont été au cœur de ces processus de réforme. Ce faisant, nous avons construit quatre propositions qui dévoilent les principales conclusions avancées dans cette thèse. Nous suggérons notamment que les approches des acteurs impliqués dans les processus de réforme des médias en Bosnie et au Kosovo peuvent être éclairées par certaines normes dominantes des environnements médiatiques aux États-Unis et en Europe de l’Ouest, ce qui permet une meilleure compréhension de leurs débats et leurs divergences.
During the interventions that followed the conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992-1995) and in Kosovo (1998-1999), important resources were engaged by international organizations to reform the Bosnian and Kosovan media space. These reforms were aimed at the depoliticization of the media environment through the establishment of media regulatory bodies and the transformation of the broadcasting sector, which had caused concern due to the presence of propagandist media that were inciting ethnic and religious hatred. Media regulatory and broadcasting reforms implemented in Bosnia and Kosovo required significant investments. Most interestingly, these reforms caused heated debates that revealed significant differences of view among the actors involved. In Bosnia, for instance, the development of a law targeting the public broadcasting system generated a sometimes acrimonious debate between the Office of the High Representative in Bosnia and the American embassy. In Kosovo, initiatives to regulate the media by the OSCE mission and the United Nations were vigorously criticized by NGOs defending freedom of the press, arguing that such measures amounted to censoring of the media. How can we explain these debates, which reveal different intervention philosophies with regards to media reforms? In light of an analysis of the normative theories of the press and of the relevant scientific literature, we have developed two ideal-types: the “American approach” and the “West-European approach”. These two concepts facilitated the analysis of the data collected during this doctoral research. The data included the information gathered from fifty interviews, many of which were conducted with policy makers and diplomats that played a key role in these reforms. The data collection and analysis, achieved through an iterative process, allowed us to develop four propositions, which reveal the main findings of this research. We suggest, among other things, that the approaches of the actors involved in the media reform processes in Bosnia and Kosovo can be explained in light of some of the media environments’ dominant norms in the United States and in Western Europe, which clarifies in turn the different perspectives of these actors and the debates that resulted.
During the interventions that followed the conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992-1995) and in Kosovo (1998-1999), important resources were engaged by international organizations to reform the Bosnian and Kosovan media space. These reforms were aimed at the depoliticization of the media environment through the establishment of media regulatory bodies and the transformation of the broadcasting sector, which had caused concern due to the presence of propagandist media that were inciting ethnic and religious hatred. Media regulatory and broadcasting reforms implemented in Bosnia and Kosovo required significant investments. Most interestingly, these reforms caused heated debates that revealed significant differences of view among the actors involved. In Bosnia, for instance, the development of a law targeting the public broadcasting system generated a sometimes acrimonious debate between the Office of the High Representative in Bosnia and the American embassy. In Kosovo, initiatives to regulate the media by the OSCE mission and the United Nations were vigorously criticized by NGOs defending freedom of the press, arguing that such measures amounted to censoring of the media. How can we explain these debates, which reveal different intervention philosophies with regards to media reforms? In light of an analysis of the normative theories of the press and of the relevant scientific literature, we have developed two ideal-types: the “American approach” and the “West-European approach”. These two concepts facilitated the analysis of the data collected during this doctoral research. The data included the information gathered from fifty interviews, many of which were conducted with policy makers and diplomats that played a key role in these reforms. The data collection and analysis, achieved through an iterative process, allowed us to develop four propositions, which reveal the main findings of this research. We suggest, among other things, that the approaches of the actors involved in the media reform processes in Bosnia and Kosovo can be explained in light of some of the media environments’ dominant norms in the United States and in Western Europe, which clarifies in turn the different perspectives of these actors and the debates that resulted.
Kuntzsch, Felix. "The violent politics of nationalism : identity and legitimacy in Palestine, Kosovo and Québec." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/25036.
Full textIn this thesis, I argue that violence is a means used by militant nationalists to persuade their audiences both within and without the nation of the inexorable nature of their nationalist project. What I call the violent politics of nationalism is essentially a struggle for legitimacy. The militants’ armed strategy, I assert, is one of provocation. Political violence is likely to provoke state repression. Where it does so, it vindicates nationalist claims and helps to wrest political legitimacy from the state. Yet, such legitimation is based on a transformation of collective identity, that is, people’s self-perception. The nation, in order to legitimize the militants, has to take a combative and uncompromising look. The intentional escalation of violence thus has a productive effect in that it determines what the people, as a nation, are. The mechanism of provoked escalation constitutes the building block of what I conceptualize as the combined process of political legitimation and identity transformation. When this dynamic is set in motion, militants emerge as the legitimate representatives of their nation which, in turn, helps them to secure the support of third parties. In order to substantiate my argument, I present a theoretical framework summarizing my approach, which I call strategic constructivist. The framework is then applied to a set of three case studies, namely, the nationalist conflicts in Palestine, Kosovo and Québec. I focus on the evolution of the respective nationalist movements and the role played in them by the relevant armed groups, that is, Fatah/PLO, the KLA, and the FLQ. Across these widely disparate cases, I trace the process that my framework highlights. The three historical narratives analyze the impact the use of violence had on the different nationalist projects in terms of identity transformation and the legitimation of militants at home and abroad. I find that my framework offers heuristic purchase in all three cases and that across them the intensity of violence co-varies with its identity-shaping effect and the level of legitimacy the militants achieved. Also, in all three cases militant action contributed to making political identities and political boundaries converge.
Tamminen, Tanja. "Des frontières convoitées aux marches de l'Union européenne : la gouvernance européenne de l'espace politique dans les Balkans du sud après la guerre du Kosovo (1999-2008)." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009IEPP0010.
Full textThis thesis concentrates on the construction of political space and the role of borders in today’s Europe. We study the transfer of new models of organisation of political space to a region that we call the Southern Balkans – Albania, Macedonia (FYROM), (Southern) Serbia, Montenegro, Kosovo and Bulgaria. The common past of this region under Ottoman rule and the number of border changes that have occurred in this region create a complex socio-historical context. This region is also interesting because the countries of the area are at different stages in their relations with the European Union. Inspired by Michel Foucault, we approach Europeanization as a form of “normalisation”. We ask ourselves how the Southern Balkans become an object of specific knowledge and how these objectivising practices influence for example new techniques for the governance of border regions. For three reasons the analysis covers the period 1999-2008: the Stability Pact for South East Europe conceived just after Kosovo war ended in 2008 as regional cooperation was taken over by local actors. The Kosovo war in 1999 pushed the European Union to develop a more coherent policy towards the Western Balkans. And in June 1999 Kosovo was placed under UN administration, UNMIK. This transitional period ended when Kosovo declared independence in February 2008 and the European Union decided to launch a new civilian crisis management operation, EULEX Kosovo
Books on the topic "Guerre au Kosovo (1998- )"
Michel, Roux. La guerre du Kosovo: Dix clés pour comprendre. Paris: Découverte, 1999.
Find full textGuillon, Claude. Dommages de guerre: Paris-Pristina-Belgrade 1999. Paris: Insomniaque, 2000.
Find full textSchiffer, Daniel Salvatore. Le testament du Kosovo: Journal de guerre. Monaco]: Éditions du Rocher, 2015.
Find full textLa Bosnie hier, le Kosovo aujourd'hui-- et demain?: Les pourquoi de la guerre dans les Balkans. Sainte-Foy, Québec: Presses de l'Université Laval, 1999.
Find full textAchcar, Gilbert. La nouvelle Guerre froide: Le monde après le Kosovo. Paris: Presses universitaires de France, 1999.
Find full textBrossat, Alain. Au miroir de la guerre: Réflexions sur la bataille du Kosovo. La Tour-d'Aigues: Editions de l'Aube, 1999.
Find full textKosovo--les mémoires qui tuent: La guerre vue sur internet. Québec: Presses de l'Université Laval, 2001.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Guerre au Kosovo (1998- )"
Mulchinock, Niall. "Kosovo – NATO’s War (1998–99)." In NATO and the Western Balkans, 95–140. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-59724-3_4.
Full text"Postscript, 1998: Kosovo in Conflict." In Kosovo, 275–84. University of California Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520341579-015.
Full text"Select Chronology: Kosovo and Yugoslavia, 1918-October 1998." In Kosovo, 285–312. University of California Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520341579-016.
Full textCrozier, Brian. "Lessons of Kosovo (1998-)." In Political Victory, 171–78. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351321921-20.
Full textJeangène Vilmer, Jean-Baptiste. "Du Kosovo à la Syrie : l’intervention humanitaire armée." In La guerre, 239–45. Éditions Sciences Humaines, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/sh.testo.2014.01.0239.
Full text"Resolution 1160 (1998). Adopted by the Security Council at its 3868th meeting, on 31 March 1998." In The Kosovo Tragedy, 344–47. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203045466-34.
Full text"Resolution 1199 (1998). Adopted by the Security Council at its 3930th meeting on 23 September 1998." In The Kosovo Tragedy, 348–51. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203045466-35.
Full textGallagher, Brendan R. "Kosovo." In The Day After, 35–68. Cornell University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501739620.003.0002.
Full text"OSCE Verification Experiences in Kosovo: November 1998-June 1999." In The Kosovo Tragedy, 134–49. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203045466-14.
Full textAndréani, Gilles. "Chapitre 15. Kosovo, libye intervention humanitaire et guerre aérienne." In Justifier la guerre ?, 383–414. Presses de Sciences Po, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/scpo.andre.2013.01.0383.
Full textConference papers on the topic "Guerre au Kosovo (1998- )"
Maxhuni, Bekrije. "Psychosomatic Symptoms in Primary Care Health and Correlation with Killed/Missing Familiar During the Last War (1998/1999) in Kosovo." In University for Business and Technology International Conference. Pristina, Kosovo: University for Business and Technology, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.33107/ubt-ic.2018.417.
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