Abstract

This article investigates the reciprocal relationship between identity and conflict, focusing the inquiry on the violent dissolution of Yugoslavia and the resulting Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s. A brief history of nationalist sentiment under communist rule in Yugoslavia is first displayed to contextualize the scope of research. The focus then shifts to how constructions of ethnonationalist identity became the basis of brutal ethnic conflict. Identity as the root of conflict is first discussed theoretically from an international relations perspective, citing the breakdown of a multinational state and the subsequent security dilemma. It is then grounded empirically in real-world evidence, illustrating how power imbalances between the republics and powerful ethnonationalist rhetoric led the region to war. The research then transitions to the secondary and complementary component of the thesis: how conflict shapes identity. The discussion cites incongruent narratives of war among the former republics as well as the tarnished international image of former Yugoslavia. Through a display of relevant evidence and literature, this argument strives to illustrate the power of identity in conflict, unity, and the nation. Further research could address how the weaponization of ethnicity could be avoided and reversed in favor of a stronger sense of collective identity around shared sociopolitical values and ideals.

Highlights

  • In academic studies of the relationship between war and the construction of identity, the violent breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY) is at the forefront of the literature

  • P i e a al f he Y g la c flic ai ai that the civil war ha a ed i 1991 a la gel he l gical c e f Mil e i ed policies, and this is evidence that identity-based ethnonationalist rhetoric was a major force of conflict in the Yugoslav Wars

  • As this paper has shown, perceptions of identity and nationalism can become weaponized, purposefully or passively, to incite conflict between ethnic groups and tear down multinational states

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In academic studies of the relationship between war and the construction of identity, the violent breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY) is at the forefront of the literature. A geographically expansive, culturally diverse, and politically non-aligned federation that existed from 1918 to 1991, the SFRY mirrors the entire Balkans in its identity as a geopolitical crossroads of culture, history, and politics (United Nations Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia [UN-ICTY], 2017). The former country of Yugoslavia has a unique history of ethnonational conflict following the collapse of a multinational state; organized political division,. With a timeline of inquiry from the beginning of the federation in 1918 to the end of the Yugoslav Wars at the turn of the twenty-first century, this essay will strive to analyze relevant research and reach a meaningful conclusion about the power of identity in national agendas

A BRIEF HISTORY OF NATIONALISM IN YUGOSLAVIA
THEORETICAL INQUIRIES
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
INCONGRUENT NARRATIVE
INTERNATIONAL IMAGE
CONCLUSION
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