Twenty years on from the signing of the Dayton Peace Agreement in November 1995, the consequences of conflict - including the long-term effects of displacement - are still being felt in the Western Balkans. FMR 50 examines the case of people who were displaced from and within Bosnia and Herzegovina as a result of the 1992-95 war, and reflects on the lessons that may be drawn from the successes and failures of the Agreement. FMR 50 includes 20 articles on 'Dayton +20', plus five 'general' articles. - See more at: http://www.fmreview.org/dayton20#sthash.cmkJOIYW.dpuf
An introductory note on FMR 50, 'Dayton + 20: twenty years on from the Dayton Agreement in the Balkans', from the Editors. Twenty years on from the si...
Annex 7 to the Dayton Peace Agreement was designed to address the displacement of 2.2 million people during the Bosnian war of 1992-95. Its job is not...
Twenty years after Dayton, failures to facilitate effective refugee and IDP return have had a social and political impact at both community and state ...
The coming two-and-a-half years represent what is possibly the last window of opportunity to accomplish what the Dayton Peace Agreement’s Annex 7 set ...
“These people are as if lost in time and space.” Still displaced after 20 years, residents of collective centres in Bosnia and Herzegovina share their...
Sidelining a rights-based approach in the area of property restitution and reconstruction in Bosnia and Herzegovina resulted in an unequal impact on r...
A social housing methodology recently introduced in Bosnia and Herzegovina illustrates the need for certain key components in any strategy to address ...
New research is attempting to address the lack of empirical grounding for much of the psychosocial programming in post-war trauma in the Western Balka...