Nationalism and the Rule of Law
Lessons from the Balkans and Beyond

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This book provides the first systematic account of the relationship between nationalism and the rule of law.

Language: English
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Nationalism and the Rule of Law
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Nationalism and the Rule of Law
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224 p. · 15.7x23.5 cm · Hardback
The relationship between nationalism and the rule of law has been largely neglected by scholars although separately they have often captured public discourse and have emerged as critical concepts. This book provides the first systematic account of this relationship. It develops an analytical framework for understanding the interactions of nationalism and the rule of law by focusing on the domains of citizenship, transitional justice and international justice. The book engages these insights further in a detailed empirical analysis of three case studies from the former Yugoslavia. The author argues that while the tensions and contradictions between nationalism and the rule of law have become more apparent in the post-Cold War era, they can also be harnessed for productive purposes. In exploring the role of law in managing and transforming nationalism, the book emphasises the deliberative character of legal processes and offers an original perspective on the power of international law to reshape public discourse, politics, and legal orders.
Part I. Nationalism and the Rule of Law: 1. Ethnic citizenship; 2. Transitional justice; 3. International criminal justice; Part II. Three Cases from the Former Yugoslavia: 4. The making of a liberal democracy: ethnic citizenship in Slovenia; 5. Contesting atrocity and identity: the war crimes debate and transitional justice in Croatia; 6. Resistance, pluralisation, and international justice in Serbia.
Iavor Rangelov is Global Security Research Fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science and Co-Chair of the London Transitional Justice Network.