Sanja¹ was born in the early 1980s in Cetinje, a town in the Republic of Montenegro, then a part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Around the time she started to go to school in the ...republic’s capital, Titograd, everyone was talking about the “young, bright and beautiful.” These were the new leaders: three guys in their late twenties—Momir (Momo) Bulatović, Milo Ðjukanović, and Svetozar (Sveto) Marović. They took over the Communist Party of Montenegro, which later became the ruling Democratic Party of Socialists (Demokratska Partija Socijalista,DPS). There was a lot of talk about war, and Sanja
Ethnonationalist Conflict in Postcommunist States: Varieties of Governance in Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Kosovo. By Koinova Maria . Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press , 2013. 328p. $69.95.