Syndicate on Wed, 12 Aug 1998 12:00:19 +0100 |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Syndicate: Transitions August Reprint Syndicate |
Welcome to TRANSITIONS's Article Reprint Syndicate. By offering articles from our magazine--free of charge--to local media in Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Central Asia, we hope to create a forum where ideas and criticism on political, economic, and cultural issues can be regularly exchanged. The Article Reprint Syndicate provides local newspapers, academic journals, and broadcasters with viewpoints, analyses, and news from areas where they may not have foreign correspondents or colleagues. Please tell your colleagues in the media about this opportunity. For back issues of the syndicate, as well as other valuable information on the region, go to our new web site at: http://www.ijt.cz/transitions/ There is absolutely no fee for the reprint service, which now reaches approximately 500 media organizations in more than 20 countries. All publications are strongly encouraged to send us articles to be distributed to other participants in the syndicate. "TRANSITIONS: Changes in Post-Communist Societies" is a monthly English-language magazine covering the ongoing changes in Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and Central Asia. With coverage extending to all 27 countries in the region, TRANSITIONS has quickly become one of the most influential and esteemed international publications, in both the East and West. Based in Prague, Czech Republic, it is distributed in more than 70 countries around the world. For subscriptions to the print version of TRANSITIONS-including a special $29 yearly rate for students and reduced rates for readers in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union-write: transitions@ijt.cz This edition of TRANSITIONS includes a special focus on Bosnia and Herzegovina. Top local and foreign analysts from within the country and without take a close look at the situation three years after Dayton and a few weeks before crucial September general elections. Below is a list and then summaries of the articles available for reprint. All articles may be shortened to fit the needs of your publication. If you are interested in reprinting any of the articles, free of charge, please send an e-mail to: syndicate@ijt.cz SPECIAL REPORT: Bosnia and Herzegovina 1."Bosnian Tightrope" 2. "Voting for Fear" 3. "Electing to Change" 4. "On the Road Again" 5. "The Bosniaks' Second Coming" 6. "Srebrenica's Ghosts" RUSSIA 7. "Condition the Cash" 8. "A Country Without a Ruble Left" 9. "Coal Fires Burning" 10. "Bringing the Money In" 11. "Showcase of Manipulated Democracy" BALTICS 12. Lithuania: "Keeping an Eye on Politicians" 13. Lithuania: "The Great Word Purge"* TRANSCAUCASIA AND CENTRAL ASIA 14. Azerbaijan: "Little Choice, Little Change" 15. Armenia: "Human Rights, the Commission, and the Helsinki Association"* 16. Kyrgyzstan: "A Reflection of Post-Soviet Democracy"* CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE 17. Czech Republic: "Stage Left"* 18. Czech Republic: "Spectacular Failure of Reform"+ 19. Czech Republic: "Christian Democracy and the Czech Republic"+ 20. Czech Republic: "Jews Before the Holocaust"+ 21. Czech Republic: "Justice or Lustration"+ 22. Czech Republic: "Intolerant Czech Students"+ 23. Czech Republic/Austria: "Austria Takes the Reins"+ 24. Slovakia: "Slovaks Under Fire for Election Law Changes" 25. Slovakia: "Shifty Laws"* SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE 26. Macedonia/Greece: "Greece and Macedonia Get Affectionate" 27. Former Yugoslavia: "When Soccer and Politics Collide" 28. Yugoslavia/Kosovo: "On the Precipice" 29. Yugoslavia/Kosovo: "Negotiation With OVK a Must"* 30. Yugoslavia/Kosovo: "Megalomania as a Boomerang"* 31. Bosnia and Herzegovina: "Bosnia's Chance" 32. Bosnia and Herzegovina: "Sarajevo Under Sanctions"* 33. Bulgaria: "Between a Rock and a Hard Place"* 34. Croatia: "Will of the People"* GERMANY 35. "The Two Berlins" MEDIA 36. Bosnia and Herzegovina: "Post-war Television" 37. Azerbaijan: "A Nation's Dignity" BOOKS 38. Czech Republic/Slovakia: "Meciar and the Velvet Divorce" GENERAL 39. "Investing in the Future" 40. "Anti-Semitism in Central European History" Article Summaries: 1. "Bosnian Tightrope" by Michael Maclay (2139 words) The international community, currently absorbed with the crisis in Kosovo, must watch its back in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and not take for granted the recent achievements under Dayton. As elections approach, a level playing field must be ensured for all candidates, especially by helping to create a media devoid of ethnic programming and propaganda. 2. "Voting for Fear" by Christopher Bennett (2055 words) The general elections in Bosnia offer some openings for moderate parties. However, a fundamentally flawed electoral system encourages nationalism, because candidates need only seek votes from one ethnic group to win office. 3. "Electing to Change" by Nerzuk Curak (2581 words) Factionalism continues to blight Bosnian politics in the run-up to the elections, but cracks are appearing in the three monolithic ethnic blocks, and a more pluralistic political scene is developing. The piece is accompanied by a 500-word sidebar (by Igor Gajic), which looks at the election campaign in Republika Srpska. 4. "On the Road Again" by Tomas Miglierina (1692 words) The bus route between Sarajevo and Banja Luka does more than just facilitate movement: it helps Bosnians break out of their own ethnically homogenous, "open-air prisons," which they inhabited for so long. The politically sensitive joint venture allows each entity to run its own buses once a day between their respective capitals. 5. "The Bosniaks' Second Coming" by Ivan Lovrenovic (1660 words) The Bosniak myth of the World War I battle at Mount Meletta currently lies unchallenged in a region where heroic mythologizing takes precedence over sober historical analysis. The author suggests that Bosnia needs to move on after a decade of militarism and raises the question: do we celebrate past wars in order to have new ones? 6. "Srebrenica's Ghosts" by Jeremy Druker After two years of research, a Dutch journalist has uncovered evidence that suggests that the Dutch Ministry of Defense covered up sensitive photographs by one of its soldiers taken immediately after the fall of Srebrenica. 7. "Condition the Cash" by Grigorii Yavlinskii (699 words) One of Russia's leading reformist politicians argues that the West should link economic assistance to deep structural as well as political reform. And matching this approach, Western policy must move beyond its reliance on the single personality of the president to build relationships with a far broader range of politicians, parties, and information. 8. "A Country Without a Ruble Left" by Dmitri Volkov and Mikhail Rogozhnikov (2663 words) The Russian economy has now reached the brink of collapse, setting up a range of possible scenarios for the future- including the return to state-planning or the total breakdown of central authority. A 600-word sidebar by Ludmila Telen looks at the ways the government can tackle the crisis. 9. "Coal Fires Burning" by Matt Taibbi (1539 words) A visit to the Russian mining town of Vorkuta reveals that the daily routine of the local miners is virtually indistinguishable from prison labor. 10. "Bringing the Money In" by Svetlana Mikhailova and Roza Tsvetkova (1091 words) A day in the life of a Moscow tax man shows the challenges to increasing tax collection rates. 11. "Showcase of Manipulated Democracy" by Tomila Lankina (1301 words) Elections in Bashkortostan, an oil-rich autonomous republic within the Russian Federation, have exposed some of the key problems of Russia's nascent federal system. Although the legality of the election was highly debatable, Moscow showed a general reluctance to intervene in the affairs of one of its resource-rich republics. The article is accompanied by a 200- word sidebar by Vitali Vitaliev on Bashkortostan and its history. 12. "Keeping an Eye on Politicians" by Howard Jarvis (637 words) Panic erupted in Lithuania's corridors of power and a probe was conducted after a newspaper revealed that a top-secret surveillance unit was keeping an eye on top government officials. 13. "The Great Word Purge" by Howard Jarvis (1115 words) Because the government and linguists are too slow to invent words of their own, English is used to explain new scientific and social concepts. The article examines the current controversy over language in Lithuania. 14. "Little Choice, Little Change" by Nair Aliev and Shahin Abbasov (2166 words) After the parliament in Azerbaijan passed a new election law in June, even pessimists began to believe that the presidential vote, now set for October, would actually take place. But the leading opposition presidential candidates have announced that they will boycott the poll unless the new law is amended. The authors also take a close look at the issues likely to affect the campaign. 15. "Human Rights, the Commission, and the Helsinki Association" by Mikael Danielyan (2265 words) A detailed look at recent human rights violations in Armenia, including the sad cases of prisoners of conscience who refuse military service. 16. "A Reflection of Post-Soviet Democracy" by Arkadij Dubnov (1449 words) Kyrgyzstan has been popularly called the "island of democracy" in central Asia. The piece warns that this description has no real basis and that the political atmosphere in the country is far removed from any kind of democracy. 17. "Stage Left" by Petruska Sustrova (1364 words) What can the new single-party Social Democratic government offer after the recent crisis in Czech politics? 18. "Spectacular Failure of Reform" by Jan Culik (950 words) A review of some of the events surrounding recent attempts to reform Czech television by the publisher of the Internet daily Britske listy. 19. "Christian Democracy and the Czech Republic" by Roger Scruton (2,600 words) An excerpt from a speech delivered to Czech Christian Democratic leaders in Prague in May 1998 in which Scruton outlines the history and pillars of Christian democracy in Europe and examines its role in the Czech Republic. 20. "Jews Before the Holocaust" by Anna Lorencova and Anna Hyndrakova (1,700 words) Results of a study by the Prague Jewish Museum documenting the experiences of Jews in the Czech Republic in the inter-war period through a series of interviews with Holocaust survivors. 21. "Justice or Lustration" by Vaclav Zak (1,870 words) The editor in chief of Listy examines the post-revolution process of lustration in light of the lack of a liberal tradition in the history of the Czech Republic. 22. "Intolerant Czech Students" by Steven Saxonberg (1,900 words) An article outlining the author's experiences with the intolerant illiberalism of Czech students which he experienced while teaching at Prague's Charles University. 23. "Austria Takes the Reins" by Kazi Stastnova (2,150 words) An interview with Peter Niesner, the Austrian ambassador to the Czech Republic, about his country's recent assumption of the EU presidency. 24. "Slovaks Under Fire for Election Law Changes" by Juraj Hrabko (570 words) Only a few months before the September elections, the Slovak parliament made controversial changes to the country's election law that critics say limits media coverage and aids Prime Minister Vladimir Meciar. 25. "Shifty Laws" by Zoltan Mikes (536 words) The Slovak government recently approved a law which allows the parliamentary chairman to accept the resignation of the government and name a new prime minister, a right previously held by the president. But it is unclear whether this law is intended to aid democracy or whether it is another one of Meciar's games aimed at preserving the political status quo. 26. "Greece and Macedonia Get Affectionate" by Helena Smith (654 words) Greece and Macedonia, after years of acrimony, say they are on the road to reconciliation. 27. "When Soccer and Politics Collide" by Neven Andjelic (789 words) During the World Cup, soccer often took on political dimensions, particularly for the nations of former Yugoslavia. 28. "On the Precipice" by Denisa Kostovic and Zoran Cirjakovic (1577 words) A vivid report from Pristina on the current lives of the Kosovo Serbs, who for years have been at least tacit supporters of Slobodan Milosevic's brutal attempts to solve "the Kosovo problem." The article is accompanied by a 500-word sidebar by Fabian Schmidt on the repercussions of the Kosovo fighting in Albania. 29. "Negotiation With OVK a Must" by Branka Vujnovic (1516 words) An interview with Azem Vlasi, former communist leader of Kosovo. Vlasi, today a lawyer in Pristina, is one of the most sought-after analysts and lecturers on the events in Kosovo. 30. "Megalomania as a Boomerang" by Slobodan Rackovic (837 words) Analysis of the recent military and political developments in Kosovo. 31. "Bosnia's Chance" by Christopher Cviic (639 words) The virtual absence of Bosnia from much of the disaster-driven Western media may provide grounds for modest optimism. Now, political forces, from all three communities, are willing to cooperate in the implementation of Dayton. Democracy it isn't, but at least the virtual international protectorate appears to be working-for the time being. 32. "Sarajevo Under Sanctions" by Darko Babic (534 words) Analysts are predicting that Sarajevo will soon be hit with economic sanctions because of the failure of refugee return. But the main fault for not implementing the so-called "Sarajevo Declaration" about refugees lies with the local authorities. 33. "Between a Rock and a Hard Place" by Kliment Trenkov (1064 words) During the last eight years, almost half a million mainly young educated people have left Bulgaria seeking a better life abroad. 34. "Will of the People" by Zoran Krzelj (1183 words) Against a background of a struggling economy and an unstable social situation, the ruling party in Croatia voted for a law that gives state officials an enormous salary raise. After the level of public disgust became clear, the president ordered that the decision be withdrawn. 35. "The Two Berlins" by Peter Schneider A long-time resident of Berlin finds that the fall of the Wall was not accompanied by a similar destruction of psychological walls. Many West Germans still think they have more in common with a Ghanaian or a Tamil refugee than with an East Berliner. Only the Wall maintained the illusion that it was a wall that separated the Germans. 36. "Post-war Television" by Zoran Udovicic A house that has no clear owner and no caretaker can easily fall apart, a fate that now threatens Radio-Television Bosnia and Herzegovina. Recent events highlight the difficulties in creating a new national television company. 37. "A Nation's Dignity" by Arif Aliev After a bizarre trial in Baku, a judge ruled that an Azerbaijani journalist had "insulted" the entire Azeri nation and ordered him to pay an exorbitant fine. The decision was the culmination of a state-media led campaign against "Monitor," an independent monthly, and its editor. 38. "Meciar and the Velvet Divorce" by Daniel Butora A review of Karol Wolf's "Podruhe a naposled, aneb mirove deleni Ceskoslovenska" ("For the Second and Last Time, or the Peaceful Division of Czechoslovakia"). Using new sources, Wolf offers glimpses behind the scenes and re-examines the main clich�©s regarding the divorce. 39. "Investing in the Future" by Mary Kaldor Non-governmental organizations, largely funded by foreign donors, appear to have had an impact on the process of democratization in Central and Eastern Europe. There is a danger that disruptions to the European Union's democracy assistance programs may stall this progress-especially in fragile situations such as Serbia, Slovakia, or Belarus. 40. "Anti-Semitism in Central European History" (1,650 words) Excerpts from a discussion broadcast on Prague's Radio Vltava in June 1998, which examined the origins and development of anti-Semitism and anti-Judaism in Christian Europe from the Middle Ages to the present. Participants included historians, theologians, the director of Prague Jewish Museum Leo Pavlat, and former Czech ambassador to Israel Milos Pojar. Jeremy Druker Staff Writer/Syndicate Coordinator Transitions magazine Seifertova 47, 130 00 Praha 3 Czech Republic 420 2 627-9445, 627-9472, 627-9473 420 2 627-9444 (fax) http://www.ijt.cz/transitions/