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CLASS:PUBLIC
DESCRIPTION:In the post-Yugoslav context, members of these Muslim communities have largely self-identified as Bosniaks, an ethnic/national term that gained prominence among Bosnian Muslims in the period immediately following the dissolution of Yugoslavia in 1991 and the outbreak of the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina. While language policies in this region were centrally formulated in the joint state, with the dissolution of the Republic of Serbia and Montenegro in 2006, the two halves of the Sandžak experienced divergent language policies.  In his presentation, Robert Greenberg, professor of linguistics at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, argues that the division of the Sandžak may have been a catalyst for destabilizing and radicalized forces to emerge in the years following the formal Serbia/Montenegro split. 
DTEND:20130328T170000Z
DTSTAMP:20130522T134828Z
DTSTART:20130328T160000Z
LOCATION:6th Floor, Woodrow Wilson Center
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-us:The Sandzak Divided: Language and Identity Politics on Either Side of the New Serbian/Montenegrin Border
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