UDC 327.56(497.115)(497.6) 327.56(497-15)
Biblid: 0543-3657, 73 (2022)
Vol. 73, No 1184, pp. 71-89
DOI: https://doi.org/10.18485/iipe_ria.2022.73.1184.4

Pregledni članak
Received: 08 Mar 2022
Accepted: 01 Apr 2022
CC BY-SA 4.0

DECONSTRUCTING LIBERAL PEACEBUILDING: LESSONS FROM THE WESTERN BALKANS

TEPŠIĆ Goran (Assistant Professor, Faculty of Political Science, University of Belgrade), goran.tepsic@fpn.bg.ac.rs
VUKELIĆ Miloš (esearch Associate, Faculty of Political Science, University of Belgrade), milos.vukelic@fpn.bg.ac.rs

The paper contributes to the deconstruction of the liberal peacebuilding concept, particularly its main components of failed state and statebuilding, through the analysis of two internationally-backed statehood projects in the Western Balkans: Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo. The authors analyse critical peacebuilding literature on these two cases to provide arguments for abandoning the failed state and state-building ideas as overly biassed and ideologically based. Instead, they suggest reintroducing the conceptualisation of state-making as a more suitable framework for understanding the post-war context and dynamics in the Western Balkans. Based on that premise, the authors conclude that the cases of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo should be approached from a broader historical and geographical perspective and call for the decentralisation of the “Westphalian state” and the reinstatement of the longue durée perspective in state-formation research, as well as the depathologisation of the subjects of that research.

Keywords: liberal peacebuilding, failed state, state-building, state-making, the Western Balkans, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo