Ana S. Trbovich.  <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0195333438> A Legal 
Geography of Yugoslavia's Disintegration. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 
2008. xiv + 522 pp. $80.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-19-533343-5. 

Reviewed by Daphne Winland (Anthropology Department, York University)
Published on H-Soyuz (July, 2009)
Commissioned by Johanna K. Bockman

The Disillusion of Yugoslavia: And the Beat Goes On 

Ana S. Trbovich’s A Legal Geography of Yugoslavia’s Disintegration is a 
valuable intervention in the long running and, at times, torturous debate over 
the collapse of the former Yugoslavia. The book provides a richly detailed, if 
not exhaustive, interpretation of the legal constitutional landscape of the 
region and its history. The author’s academic and political credentials, most 
recently as director of the Center for European Integration and Management of 
Public Administration at the University of Singidunum in Belgrade, as well as 
her service as assistant minister of International Economic Relations for the 
government of Serbia, is reflected in her extensive knowledge and experience in 
the intricacies and nuances of political decision making. Trbovich chronicles 
the complex national state administrative and political incarnations of 
Yugoslavia, focusing primarily on post-1914 Yugoslavia. To this end, she 
carefully maps out the complex legal and political terrain--the “legal 
geography”--of the former Yugoslavia. The evolution of Yugoslavia as a state is 
meticulously researched, evidenced in extensive footnotes and citations, 
including scholarly work, a host of relevant legal statutes, resolutions, and 
reports. The list of maps as well as an extensive bibliography containing 
primary and secondary sources are excellent resources for those interested in 
both international law and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY).

The purpose of the book becomes clear early on, and that is to make a case for 
what the author argues was the complicity of the international community in the 
break-up of the former Yugoslavia and the illegal use of force in 1999 against 
the FRY by NATO forces. Most important though is Trbovich’s analysis of what 
she argues is “an almost complete reversal” of international practice of 
respect for the territorial and constitutional integrity of sovereign states 
(p. 1). To this end, the author carefully lays out the legal, juridical, and 
constitutional grounds for intervention in the internal affairs of states by 
citing contexts where such action has been used not only legitimately but also 
in concert with international law and principles of sovereignty, as well as 
with respect for the integrity of state legal and constitutional structures. 
Trbovich begins her analysis with an examination of the problematic and 
selective interpretation of two pivotal international legal 
principles--self-determination and secession--and how, in the case of 
Yugoslavia, misguided assessments on the part of the international community 
led to the demise of Yugoslavia and the bloody wars of secession that followed. 
She demonstrates how policy decisions based on the protection of minority and 
human rights--ubiquitous and, some argue, hegemonic concepts for which there 
are no consensual definitions--undermine the credibility and force of 
international law. Thus, for example, when does a minority become a “people” 
deserving of the political right of self-determination? The dubious viability 
of particular (minority) rights regimes (and here the author cites the case of 
Kosovar Albanians) raises questions about the legality of claims for 
self-determination that often serve to undermine the integrity of a state’s 
constitution. According to Trbovich, discussion and debate is better served by 
a focus on constitutional and legal provisions and precedents than by appeals 
to universal moral principles.

The author charts the historical development of the Yugoslav federation 
beginning in 1918 when Serbian, Croatian, and, to a lesser extent, Slovenian 
and other national movements were solidifying the ideological foundations of 
what would later become demands for self-determination and, eventually, 
secession in 1991. Throughout the book, Yugoslav regimes after 1918 all receive 
positive valuation relative to those of other states in the region. This is 
attributed to a history of democratic governance and recognition of the rights 
of Yugoslavia’s constituent nations. The histories of Kosovo i  Metohija (the 
name enshrined in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia constitution, 
dropped by Josip Broz Tito in 1974, and then reinstated by Slobodan Milošević 
in 1989), Croatia, Slovenia, and the other Yugoslav republics and provinces are 
examined with particular emphasis on the challenges they have posed to the 
legitimacy of Yugoslav federal administrative borders and to the state 
itself.[1] Among the historical examples the author uses to bolster her 
analysis, World War II comes under particular scrutiny as a period when Croatia 
aligned itself with the fascist Axis powers in 1941 and perpetrated atrocities 
against Serbs, Jews, and others. According to Trbovich, the actions of the 
fascist Ustasha state against Serbs amounted to genocide. While debates about 
the roles and responsibilities of Croats, Serbs, and others during this period, 
and charges of genocide and ethnic cleansing rage on, the author focuses mainly 
on the claim that Serbs were the primary victims of Croatian genocide. The 
fascist taint of Croatia during World War II is extended to the 1990s in 
reference to Croatia’s offensive in Krayina (Krajina). The choice of language 
is significant: “Thus while Serbs are admonished for expelling Croats ... the 
cleansing of numerous Serbs ... occurred unnoticed” (p. 302, emphasis mine).

The tendency to present evidence to support one’s arguments to the neglect of 
that which may cast doubt is not unusual in the scholarship on Yugoslavia, but 
it is somewhat troublesome given the lengths to which Trbovich has gone to 
present a comprehensive, extensively researched, and balanced perspective on 
the region and its history. For example, the omission of highly respected 
scholarship on Kosovo and Bosnia, such as Noel Malcolm’s Kosovo: A Short 
History (1998) and Bosnia: A Short History (1994), and Julie Mertus’s Kosovo: 
How Myths and Truths Started a War (1999) is curious at best, as is that on 
Serbia, such as Robert Thomas’s The Politics of Serbia in the 1990s (1999), and 
Jasminka Udovički and James Ridgeway’s Burn This House: The Making and Unmaking 
of Yugoslavia (2000). The book also, at times, betrays a certain degree of 
hostility toward Croats, claiming ultimately that the foundations of Croatia’s 
grievances against Yugoslavia amount to historical revisionism. While few would 
deny the brutality of Croatia’s WWII fascist past and their actions in 
Operations Storm and Flash, Trbovich seems compelled to exonerate Serbs of any 
wrongdoing, reflected in frequent allusions to the “conciliatory” nature and 
peaceful intentions of FRY and their continuous willingness to compromise (p. 
298). For example, the Yugoslav National Army is deemed to have “acted only in 
self defence” in responding to the “illegal use of force by secessionists” (p. 
283). Scant attention is devoted to the culpability of the Milošević regime and 
of Bosnian Serbs for the brutal war in Bosnia and Herzegovina (including the 
four-year siege of Sarajevo), the massacre at Srebrenica, the destruction of 
Vukovar, and, more generally, the central role of extreme nationalism during 
the 1990s. If the author’s intention is to present a balanced argument that 
focuses mainly on the constitutional and legal grounds of intervention in the 
affairs of sovereign states, then greater care should have been taken to 
present an evenhanded treatment of all parties to the conflict. The use of 
value-laden terms, such as “pogrom” in relation to Serbs only, as well as 
accusations of ethnic cleansing and genocide against Albanians and Croats to 
the exclusion of Serbs, is deeply problematic and diminishes the persuasiveness 
of Trbovich’s analysis, especially in the face of overwhelming evidence to the 
contrary (pp. 355, 406).

Trbovich’s analysis of the events leading up to and during the NATO bombing of 
Belgrade represents more careful and balanced analysis of the role of 
international bodies in intervention. Although the author mainly identifies 
discrimination of Serbs at the hands of Albanians in Kosovo (even though the 
reverse is well documented), Trbovich makes a compelling case against the 
controversial series of decisions that led to NATO’s air campaign against FRY 
in 1999. The rush to respond resulted not only in devastating consequences for 
those caught on the ground, but also serious repercussions for the process by 
which claims for self-determination are assessed and acted on by the 
international community. Trbovich makes a strong case for her assertion that 
NATO’s actions in FRY have compromised the principles on which international 
laws and precedents concerning state sovereignty are built. For example, 
Trbovich invokes the rules of ius ad bellum  (law governing the right to go to 
war) and ius in bello (conduct of war once it has begun) embedded in the UN 
Charter, to underscore her contention that NATO actions were a direct violation 
of the UN Security Council process to which it was accountable and that 
diplomatic initiatives to resolve the conflict peacefully were not exhausted. 
The justification that followed the NATO campaign--humanitarian 
intervention--is thus flawed on both moral and legal grounds. Trbovich’s 
argument is ever more urgent given the troubling spate of interventions by the 
West since 2001 in Iraq and Afghanistan and the looming threat of more to come. 
Her analysis confirms the critiques of many legal scholars who argue that 
debates concerning intervention in Kosovo or Bosnia and Herzegovina are 
increasingly difficult to evaluate, given that they often appeal to realist, 
relativist, and/or moral principles. Exceptions to prescriptive legal statutes 
and conventions, not to mention realpolitik, are becoming the norm in 
international affairs.

The final two chapters of the book thus provide some useful lessons for 
thinking about conditions under which international intervention is necessary 
and/or legitimate. Although in hindsight it is perhaps easy to say that the 
political fates of both Kosovo and Bosnia and Herzegovina remain precarious, 
Trbovich argues convincingly for the need for greater commitment to early 
diplomacy in reaching negotiated solutions and cautions against the 
increasingly problematic trend toward the enforcement of democratic governance 
and the compromising of territorial sovereignty. This, according to the author, 
ultimately represents an abrogation of our collective duty to respect the 
integrity of state constitutions, sovereignty, and international law. While 
readers may find some observations, analogies, and/or conclusions drawn by the 
author objectionable, her contribution to the debates over the uses and abuses 
of international treaties, and laws around intervention in the context of human 
and minority rights, is a welcome and necessary one.

Note

[1]. The transliteration of Serbian names to phonetic English will be confusing 
to those who, particularly in the past fifteen to twenty years, have grown 
accustomed to reading script (sometimes with diacritics) in the Roman alphabet. 
Thus, a commonly cited name such as Milošević appears as Miloshevich.

http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=22791

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