Bosnia: Overview of Issues Ten Years After Dayton

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Series Details November, 2005
Publication Date 14/11/2005
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The Congressional Research Service, a department of the Library of Congress, conducts research and analysis for Congress on a broad range of national and international policy issues. Some of the CRS work is carried out specifically for individual members of Congress or their staff and is confidential. However, there is also much CRS compiled material which is considered public but is not formally published on the CRS website.

For that reason a number of other organisations try to keep track of these publications and make them publicly available via their own websites. Currently, ESO uses the following websites to track these reports and allow access to them in ESO:

EveryCRSReport.com
Federation of American Scientists (FAS)

In some cases hyperlinks allows you to access all versions of a report, including the latest. Note that many reports are periodically updated.On November 21-22, 2005, the United States will host a meeting with Bosnia’s collective leadership to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Dayton accords, an agreement brokered under U.S. leadership that ended the 1992-1995 conflict in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Since early 2005, the Bush Administration has given renewed emphasis to ‘unfinished business’ in the western Balkan region, such as the unresolved status of Kosovo, a U.N.-run province of Serbia.

The United States also seeks to bolster Bosnia’s further development as a unified, democratic, and stable state on the path toward Euro-Atlantic integration, including major constitutional reforms. This report provides an overview of prominent current issues concerning Bosnia and will be updated after the 10th anniversary meeting in Washington. For further background information, see CRS Report RL32392, Bosnia and Herzegovina: Issues for U.S. Policy, by Steven Woehrel.

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Federation of American Scientists (FAS): Congressional Research Service [CRS] Reports https://fas.org/sgp/crs/index.html

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