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The editors of the Journal of Genocide Research (journal of the International Network of Genocide Scholars) are pleased to announce the publication of a special issue on "Ethnic homogenizing in southeastern Europe."
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Homogenizing southeastern Europe, 1912–99: ethnic cleansing in the Balkans revisitedAlexander KorbPages: 377–387
Articles
The Balkan Wars: violence and nation-building in the Balkans, 1912–13Mark BiondichPages: 389–404
Continuity vs. radical break: national homogenization campaigns in the Greek-Bulgarian borderlands before and after the Balkan WarsTheodora DragostinovaPages: 405–426
From Muslims into Turks? Consensual demographic engineering between interwar Yugoslavia and TurkeyThomas SchadPages: 427–446
‘Ethnic cleansing’ in peacetime? Yugoslav/Serb colonization projects in Vojvodina in the twentieth centuryMichael PortmannPages: 447–462
Perpetuating fear: insecurity, costly signalling and the war in central Bosnia, 1993Tomislav DulićPages: 463–484
Post-Dayton ethnic engineering in Croatia through the lenses of property issues and social transformationsCarolin Leutloff-GranditsPages: 485–502
Book Forum
Review article
Austro-Hungarian War Aims in the Balkans during World War IJohn Paul Newman, Samuel Foster & Eric Beckett WeaverPages: 503–513
Response to discussion of Austro-Hungarian War Aims in the Balkans during World War IMarvin Benjamin FriedPages: 515–517
General Articles
‘We do not know who painted our pictures’: child transfers and cultural genocide in the destruction of Cape San societies along the Cape Colony’s north-eastern frontier, c.1770–1830Jared McDonaldPages: 519–538
Habituation to atrocity: low-level violence against civilians as a predictor of high-level attacksCharles H. Anderton & Edward V. RyanPages: 539–562