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Many thanks to Ambassador John Fraser, Dejan Guzina, and Professors Teresa Rakowka-Harmstone, the late Carl Jacobsen, Zlatko Isaković, and Mihailo Crnobrnja, for shaping my interest in the Balkans and its people. James Gow’s seminar on Yugoslavia at King’s College London was also a fount of information, as were the translated documents he kindly provided. Many thanks to the staff at the Matica Hrvatska Iseljenika for their illuminating insight on the people and history of Croatia. I learned much during my research and study trip there in 1994, and during my return in 1999. Thank you to the Hamza family in Sarajevo for their colourful, and at times distressing, stories about the war in Bosnia, and of course, their wonderful hospitality.
A special thanks to the editors of Slovo at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies for having published two of my articles. These were based on two conference papers, which were in turn based on several aspects of my doctoral research.1Close I also tested many theories and ideas at the Brave New World II conference at the University of Manchester, and through participation in seminars organised by the Contemporary Research on International Political Theory (CRIPT) work group. Thanks also to Nick Bisley, for his editing skills and suggestions, and to my supervisor Spyros Economides, for ploughing through much of the good, bad, and horribly disfigured, with consummate and tireless skill. George Schöpflin and James Mayall have also provided extremely useful and timely criticisms of this study in their capacity as thesis examiners. My thanks to them. Additional thanks go to the staff at Manchester University Press. I would also like to thank my agent Beverly Friedgood, and the LSE publications department for their invaluable contributions. The staff at the British Library and the British Library of Political and Economic Sciences have also been extremely helpful. A final thank you to Philippe Nemo, for giving me the flexibility to test out many of my theories and ideas in a wide range of courses, during my three years as assistant visiting professor at the École Superieur de Commerce de Paris (ESCP-EAP).
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