Abstract

In the human security agenda of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, international organizations have accorded a high priority to the establishment of democratic political processes and the creation of responsible institutions in war-torn societies. An emphasis on free elections as the centre-piece of democracy has been prominent in the peacebuilding processes developed for Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) in the 1995 Dayton Agreement. This chapter argues that a ‘protectorate democracy’ has been created in BiH and that something similar is emerging in Kosovo.

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