<http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/65352/patrice-c-mcmahon-and-jon-western/the-death-of-dayton#navigation>
 Skip to Navigation

 <http://www.foreignaffairs.com/> Home ›  
<http://www.foreignaffairs.com/features> Features ›  
<http://www.foreignaffairs.com/features/essays> Essays › The Death of Dayton


The Death of Dayton


 

How to Stop Bosnia From Falling Apart 

Patrice C. <http://www.foreignaffairs.com/author/patrice-c-mcmahon>  McMahon 
and Jon <http://www.foreignaffairs.com/author/jon-western>  Western 

September/October 2009 <http://www.foreignaffairs.com/issues/2009/88/5>  

·          

Summary -- 

Bosnia was once a poster child for successful postwar reconstruction; today, it 
is on the verge of collapse. The 1995 Dayton accord ended a war, but it also 
created a fractured polity ripe for exploitation by ethnic chauvinists.  

PATRICE C. MCMAHON is Associate Professor of Political Science at the 
University of Nebraska-Lincoln. JON WESTERN is Five College Associate Professor 
of International Relations at Mount Holyoke College and the Five Colleges.

After 14 years of intense international efforts to stabilize and rebuild 
Bosnia, the country now stands on the brink of collapse. For the first time 
since November 1995 -- when the Dayton accord ended three and a half years of 
bloody ethnic strife -- Bosnians are once again talking about the potential for 
war.

Bosnia was once the poster child for international reconstruction efforts. It 
was routinely touted by U.S. and European leaders as proof that under the right 
conditions the international community could successfully rebuild 
conflict-ridden countries. The 1995 Dayton peace agreement divided Bosnia into 
two semi-independent entities: the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 
inhabited mainly by Bosnian Muslims and Bosnian Croats, and the Serb-dominated 
Republika Srpska (Serb Republic, or RS), each with its own government, 
controlling taxation, educational policy, and even foreign policy. Soon after 
the war's end, the country was flooded with attention and over $14 billion in 
international aid, making it a laboratory for what was arguably the most 
extensive and innovative democratization experiment in history. By the end of 
1996, 17 different foreign governments, 18 UN agencies, 27 intergovernmental 
organizations, and about 200 nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) -- not to 
mention tens of thousands of troops from across the globe -- were involved in 
reconstruction efforts. On a per capita basis, the reconstruction of Bosnia -- 
with less than four million citizens -- made the post-World War II rebuilding 
of Germany and Japan look modest.

As successful as Dayton was at ending the violence, it also sowed the seeds of 
instability by creating a decentralized political system that undermined the 
state's authority. In the past three years, ethnic nationalist rhetoric from 
leaders of the country's three constituent ethnic groups -- Muslims, Croats, 
and Serbs -- has intensified, bringing reform to a standstill. The economy has 
stalled, unemployment is over 27 percent, about 25 percent of the population 
lives in poverty, and Bosnia remains near the bottom of World Bank rankings for 
business development.

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/65352/patrice-c-mcmahon-and-jon-western/the-death-of-dayton

Reply via email to