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Reversing Ethnic Cleansing through Minority Returns examines whether and how ethnic, religious, and political minorities should be returned and reintegrated after conflict.
List of contents
- 1: Understanding the Quest to Reverse Ethinic Cleansing in Bosnia
- 2: Possible Explanations for the Emergence of a Novel Idea
- 3: From the Un-Mixing to the Re-Mixing of Peoples: A Brief Oview of International Responses to Ethnic Cleansing in Twentieth Century Europe
- 4: Origins of the Re-Mixing Idea (1991-1994)
- 5: The United States and the Formalisation of Re-Mixing (1994-1995)
- 6: UNHCR and Defending the Re-Mixing Policy (1996-1997)
- 7: Attempting to Implement the Re-Mixing Idea (1998-2003)
- 8: Re-Mixing: Mission Complete or Mission Abandoned?
- 9: Drawing Lessons from the Remixing Case
About the author
Dr. Rebecca Brubaker is the Director of Policy, Learning and Advisory Services at Interpeace, one of the oldest international peacebuilding organizations. Previously, she worked for the United Nations (UN) leading portfolios relating to conflict prevention, transitional justice, humanitarian affairs, and sanctions. Prior to joining the UN, Dr. Brubaker served as a scholar and visiting lecturer at the University of Oxford, Yale University, University of Virginia, the Free University of Brussels (ULB), and the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (Geneva). She holds a DPhil and MSc from the University of Oxford, where she studied as a Rhodes scholar.
Summary
Reversing Ethnic Cleansing through Minority Returns examines whether and how ethnic, religious, and political minorities should be returned and reintegrated after conflict.