Bringing Justice to Victims? Report on ICTY’s Work in Progress
The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia believes it will complete its work in 2017, though challenges remain.
Lost or Found? The Story of Bosnia’s Forgotten Children
In July 1992, 46 Bosnian children from the Bjelave Orphanage in Sarajevo were evacuated to Italy. None of them have returned.
Kati Marton: A Life of Reinvention
Yeree Woo speaks with renowned Hungarian-American author, award-winning journalist and renowned human rights activist Kati Marton, whose vibrant career and high profile love life put most lives to shame.
Arms Trade
In the context of the wars that occurred in the former Yugoslavia, it would seem logical to approach the arms trade in South East Europe (SEE) with a sense of apprehension. The question is: does the trade make the region less stable and secure?
Missing in Syria
In Syria, enforced disappearance is being employed as a deliberate strategy to terrorize families and communities and to spread a fear capable of crippling resistance and silencing dissent.
Bosnia as the European Avant-garde
Despite the fact that it went through the most brutal armed conflict in Europe since World War II, Bosnia-Herzegovina’s multiculturalism —albeit now tinged with horrific war memories — is at least three levels above Western multiculturalism.