Border security in the Balkans : Europe's gatekeepers /

Borders dominate the security agenda in South-east Europe. Political and ethnic discontents focus on disputed borders, while traffickers in migrants and drugs ignore them. The EU argues that the Balkan countries should develop models of border management using its policing standards, but the region...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hills, Alice, 1950-
Corporate Author: International Institute for Strategic Studies.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Oxford, U.K. ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2004.
Series:Adelphi papers ; no. 371.
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Summary:Borders dominate the security agenda in South-east Europe. Political and ethnic discontents focus on disputed borders, while traffickers in migrants and drugs ignore them. The EU argues that the Balkan countries should develop models of border management using its policing standards, but the region is rife with corruption and its border guards are both under-resourced and ineffective. This paper asks how and why border management in South-east Europe is developing as it is, and what this might mean for the future of Europe. Drawing on recent experiences in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Macedonia and Albania, it looks at the ways in which the region's boarders are managed, and gauges the development of a consensual European approach to border security. It shows how governments and guards understand the predicament of regional insecurity, and how they respond with strategies that accomodate, evade or subvert unavoidable political pressures.
Item Description:"First published December 2004 by Oxford University Presss for The International Institute for Strategic Studies"--T.p. verso.
Physical Description:88 p. ; 24 cm.
Also available online via Oxford Journals (subscription-based access)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references.
ISSN:0567-932X