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This book offers the first multi-case analysis of the politics of ethnic remixing in an expanding EU, including studies on Central Europe, the Balkans and Cyprus. Tesser explains the politics of minority return in a post-national Europe, with particular attention to the long-term aftermath of minority removal as a conflict resolution policy.

Produktbeschreibung
This book offers the first multi-case analysis of the politics of ethnic remixing in an expanding EU, including studies on Central Europe, the Balkans and Cyprus. Tesser explains the politics of minority return in a post-national Europe, with particular attention to the long-term aftermath of minority removal as a conflict resolution policy.
Autorenporträt
Lynn M. Tesser has spent over four years teaching and researching in Central Europe, the Balkans, and Cyprus. Tesser has held academic affiliations in the U.S., Germany, Poland, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Finland, and Cyprus, and received fellowships from the Fulbright Commission, Social Science Research Council, MacArthur and Mellon Foundations, among others. Her work on nationalism, EU expansion, and forced migration has been published in East European Politics and Societies, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, and Geopolitics. She holds a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Chicago, U.S.
Rezensionen
"Lynn Tesser has written an important book that epitomizes the best traits of good comparative research: strong theoretical foundations and an engaging and innovative empirical structure. Her ability to cover diverse regions and periods has enabled her to provide us with crucial insights into how far Europe has come in its understanding of and responses to forced migrations, 'ethnic cleansing', and ultimately genocide. Tesser's disturbing and well-argued conclusion is: not nearly far enough." - Josip Glaurdic, Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge, UK. "Tesser draws together a wide range of theoretical perspectives and combines them with rich historical detail to provide a fresh look at the politics of ethnic separation and subsequent remixing. Her thought provoking analysis will be of interest to students, researchers and policy makers concerned with nationalism and ethnic conflict." - Jennifer Jackson-Preece, London School of Economics, UK.