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The Srebrenica Massacre - Nova Srpska Politicka Misao

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Note on Contributors<br />

George Bogdanich is director and co-producer with Munich-based<br />

filmmaker Martin Lettmayer of the documentary Yugoslavia <strong>The</strong> Avoidable<br />

War (Frontier <strong>The</strong>atre & Inc., 2000).<br />

Phillip Corwin served with the United Nations for 27 years, including<br />

his stint in 1995 as the UN Civilian Affairs Coordinator in<br />

Bosnia and Herzegovina, the UN’s highest ranking political officer in<br />

Sarajevo. Corwin also served in UN peacekeeping operations in Haiti,<br />

the Western Sahara, and Afghanistan, and as a speechwriter for UN Secretary-General<br />

Perez de Cuellar. Corwin is the author of Dubious Mandate:<br />

A Memoir of the UN in Bosnia, Summer 1995 (Duke University<br />

Press, 1999) and Doomed in Afghanistan: A UN Officer’s Memoir of the<br />

Fall of Kabul and Najibullah’s Failed Escape, 1992 (Rutgers University<br />

Press, 2002).<br />

Tim Fenton is an Oxford, England-based IT professional and researcher.<br />

His connection with Yugoslavia began 26 years ago when he<br />

married his Yugoslav wife, and he has followed the turbulent events in<br />

the region ever since, including numerous visits there. He started focusing<br />

on the break-up of Yugoslavia when he witnessed first-hand the<br />

rebirth of Croatian nationalism during the 1989 election campaign of<br />

Franjo Tudjman. He believes that the conflicts over the former Yugoslavia,<br />

and over Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo specifically, were<br />

defining moments in the use of the “new media” for political and military<br />

purposes.<br />

Philip Hammond is a Reader in Media and Communications in<br />

the Faculty of Arts and Human Sciences, London South Bank University.<br />

He is co-editor with Edward S. Herman of Degraded Capability:<br />

<strong>The</strong> Media and Kosovo Crisis (Pluto Press, 2000), and the author of<br />

Framing Post-Cold War Conflicts: <strong>The</strong> Media & International Intervention<br />

(Manchester University Press, 2007), Media, War and Postmodernity<br />

(Routledge, 2007), and co-editor with Andrew Calcutt of Journalism<br />

Studies: A Critical Introduction (Routledge, 2011).<br />

Edward S. Herman is Professor Emeritus of Finance at the<br />

Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, and has written<br />

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