Podcasts about radovan karadzic architect

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Latest podcast episodes about radovan karadzic architect

Tyran
Milosevic 5:5 Nørdeafsnit

Tyran

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2025 26:03


Vi fortæller alt det vi ikke nåede at fortælle om den vanvittige krigsforbryder Radovan Karadzic. Research: Oskar Bundgaard. Tilrettelæggelse: Nicholas Durup Thomsen og Oskar Bundgaard. Soundtrack & lyddesign: Anton Færch. DR Redaktør: Anders Stegger. Produceret for P3 af MonoMono. Litteraturliste: Branson, Louise og Dusko doder(1999): Milosevic : portrait of a tyrant Cohen, Lenard J.(2000)Serpent in the bosom : the rise and fall of Slobodan Milosevic Donia, Robert J.(2015): Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the bosnian genocide Independent International Commission on Kosovo(2000): The Kosovo report : conflict, international response, lessons learned Lebor, Adam(2004): Milosevic: a biography Sell, Louis(2003): Slobodan Milosevic and the destruction of Yugoslavia

Tyran
Milosevic 4:5

Tyran

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2025 30:31


I Kosovo kæmper Slobodan Milosevic sin sidste krig. Han forsøger at knuse albanerne med brutal magt, men denne gang går det galt. NATO bomber Serbien, økonomien kollapser, og folket vender sig mod deres tyranniske leder. Research: Oskar Bundgaard. Tilrettelæggelse: Nicholas Durup Thomsen og Oskar Bundgaard. Fortæller: Nicholas Durup Thomsen. Soundtrack & lyddesign: Anton Færch. DR Redaktør: Anders Stegger. Produceret for P3 af MonoMono. Litteraturliste: Branson, Louise og Dusko doder(1999): Milosevic : portrait of a tyrant Cohen, Lenard J.(2000)Serpent in the bosom : the rise and fall of Slobodan Milosevic Donia, Robert J.(2015): Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the bosnian genocide Independent International Commission on Kosovo(2000): The Kosovo report : conflict, international response, lessons learned Lebor, Adam(2004): Milosevic: a biography Sell, Louis(2003): Slobodan Milosevic and the destruction of Yugoslavia

Tyran
Milosevic 3:5

Tyran

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2025 22:39


Efter år med krig og kaos forsøger Slobodan Milosevic pludselig at spille fredsmager i Bosnien-krigen. Han håber at genopbygge sin popularitet, men bag facaden er Serbien bare pilråddent. Vold, korruption og nepotisme gennemsyrer hele samfundet - en mafiaøkonomi, hvor kun de loyale belønnes. Research: Oskar Bundgaard. Tilrettelæggelse: Nicholas Durup Thomsen og Oskar Bundgaard. Fortæller: Nicholas Durup Thomsen. Soundtrack & lyddesign: Anton Færch. DR Redaktør: Anders Stegger. Produceret for P3 af MonoMono. Litteraturliste: Branson, Louise og Dusko doder(1999): Milosevic : portrait of a tyrant Cohen, Lenard J.(2000)Serpent in the bosom : the rise and fall of Slobodan Milosevic Donia, Robert J.(2015): Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the bosnian genocide Independent International Commission on Kosovo(2000): The Kosovo report : conflict, international response, lessons learned Lebor, Adam(2004): Milosevic: a biography Sell, Louis(2003): Slobodan Milosevic and the destruction of Yugoslavia

Tyran
Milosevic 2:5

Tyran

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 35:44


Slobodan Milosevic har sikret sig magten i Serbien, men hans ambitioner stopper ikke dér. Han vil nu brede sin magt ud over det øvrige Jugoslavien - og han vil gøre det med vold, hvis det er nødvendigt. Med allierede som den brutale Radovan Karadzic sætter han Balkan i flammer. Milosevic drømmer om serbisk dominans - men efterlader kun død og ødelæggelse. Krigen raser i Bosnien, hvor etnisk udrensning og belejringen af Sarajevo og Srebrenica bliver symboler på rædslerne. Research: Oskar Bundgaard. Tilrettelæggelse: Nicholas Durup Thomsen og Oskar Bundgaard. Fortæller: Nicholas Durup Thomsen. Soundtrack & lyddesign: Anton Færch. DR Redaktør: Anders Stegger. Produceret for P3 af MonoMono. Litteraturliste: Branson, Louise og Dusko doder(1999): Milosevic : portrait of a tyrant Cohen, Lenard J.(2000)Serpent in the bosom : the rise and fall of Slobodan Milosevic Donia, Robert J.(2015): Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the bosnian genocide Independent International Commission on Kosovo(2000): The Kosovo report : conflict, international response, lessons learned Lebor, Adam(2004): Milosevic: a biography Sell, Louis(2003): Slobodan Milosevic and the destruction of Yugoslavia

Tyran
Milosevic 1:5

Tyran

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 33:53


Slobodan Milosevic og Ivan Stambolic er bedste venner, og igennem mange år hjælper Ivan Stambolic Milosevic med at skabe sig en politisk karriere i Jugoslaviens kommunistparti. Men da magten så pludselig kommer indenfor rækkevidde, så viser Milosevic sig at være fuldstændig ligeglad med alt, hvad der hedder venskab og loyalitet - hvis han skal vælte Stambolic for selv at få succes - så gør han gerne det. Research: Oskar Bundgaard. Tilrettelæggelse: Nicholas Durup Thomsen og Oskar Bundgaard. Fortæller: Nicholas Durup Thomsen. Soundtrack & lyddesign: Anton Færch. DR Redaktør: Anders Stegger. Produceret for P3 af MonoMono. Litteraturliste: Branson, Louise og Dusko doder(1999): Milosevic : portrait of a tyrant Cohen, Lenard J.(2000)Serpent in the bosom : the rise and fall of Slobodan Milosevic Donia, Robert J.(2015): Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the bosnian genocide Independent International Commission on Kosovo(2000): The Kosovo report : conflict, international response, lessons learned Lebor, Adam(2004): Milosevic: a biography Sell, Louis(2003): Slobodan Milosevic and the destruction of Yugoslavia

Exchanges: A Cambridge UP Podcast
Robert J. Donia, “Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide” (Cambridge UP, 2014)

Exchanges: A Cambridge UP Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2015 67:29


As a graduate student at Ohio State in the early 1990s, I remember watching the collapse of Yugoslavia on the news almost every night and reading about it in the newspaper the next day.The first genocidal conflict covered in real time, dozens of reporters covered the war from the front lines or from a Sarajevo under siege. Not surprisingly, the media coverage was accompanied by a flood of memoirs and histories trying to explain the wars to a population that, at least in the US, knew little to nothing about the region. These were valuable studies–informative, interesting and often emotionally shattering. Istill assign them in classes today. But histories of the present, to steal a phrase from Timothy Garton Ash, are always incomplete and impressionistic.They lack both the opportunity to engage primary sources and the perspective offered by distance. Twenty years on, we're now in a position to begin to reexamine and rethink many of the conclusions drawn in the midst of the conflict. Robert J. Donia‘s new book Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide (Cambridge University Press, 2014)is an excellent step in this direction. Donia takes advantage of a remarkable depth of sources, including wiretap records of the phone calls Karadzic made with leading officials in Bosnia and Yugoslavia, to paint a compelling picture of a man transformed by conflict. His argument is simple, that it was the events of the late 1980s and especially early 1990s that made Karadzic into a nationalist willing to employ ethnic cleansing and genocidal massacres in his quest to secure safety and power for his people. In elevating Kardzic, Donia revises our understanding of the role and guilt of Slobodan Milosevic. His argument is detailed and well-supported, made even more compelling by Donia's recollections of his encounters with Karadzic when Donia was a witness at before the ICTY. It's a book anyone interested in understanding what happened in the former Yugoslavia will have to read and engage.

New Books in Genocide Studies
Robert J. Donia, “Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide” (Cambridge UP, 2014)

New Books in Genocide Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2015 67:29


As a graduate student at Ohio State in the early 1990s, I remember watching the collapse of Yugoslavia on the news almost every night and reading about it in the newspaper the next day.The first genocidal conflict covered in real time, dozens of reporters covered the war from the front lines or from a Sarajevo under siege. Not surprisingly, the media coverage was accompanied by a flood of memoirs and histories trying to explain the wars to a population that, at least in the US, knew little to nothing about the region. These were valuable studies–informative, interesting and often emotionally shattering. Istill assign them in classes today. But histories of the present, to steal a phrase from Timothy Garton Ash, are always incomplete and impressionistic.They lack both the opportunity to engage primary sources and the perspective offered by distance. Twenty years on, we’re now in a position to begin to reexamine and rethink many of the conclusions drawn in the midst of the conflict. Robert J. Donia‘s new book Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide (Cambridge University Press, 2014)is an excellent step in this direction. Donia takes advantage of a remarkable depth of sources, including wiretap records of the phone calls Karadzic made with leading officials in Bosnia and Yugoslavia, to paint a compelling picture of a man transformed by conflict. His argument is simple, that it was the events of the late 1980s and especially early 1990s that made Karadzic into a nationalist willing to employ ethnic cleansing and genocidal massacres in his quest to secure safety and power for his people. In elevating Kardzic, Donia revises our understanding of the role and guilt of Slobodan Milosevic. His argument is detailed and well-supported, made even more compelling by Donia’s recollections of his encounters with Karadzic when Donia was a witness at before the ICTY. It’s a book anyone interested in understanding what happened in the former Yugoslavia will have to read and engage. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in European Studies
Robert J. Donia, “Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide” (Cambridge UP, 2014)

New Books in European Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2015 67:29


As a graduate student at Ohio State in the early 1990s, I remember watching the collapse of Yugoslavia on the news almost every night and reading about it in the newspaper the next day.The first genocidal conflict covered in real time, dozens of reporters covered the war from the front lines or from a Sarajevo under siege. Not surprisingly, the media coverage was accompanied by a flood of memoirs and histories trying to explain the wars to a population that, at least in the US, knew little to nothing about the region. These were valuable studies–informative, interesting and often emotionally shattering. Istill assign them in classes today. But histories of the present, to steal a phrase from Timothy Garton Ash, are always incomplete and impressionistic.They lack both the opportunity to engage primary sources and the perspective offered by distance. Twenty years on, we’re now in a position to begin to reexamine and rethink many of the conclusions drawn in the midst of the conflict. Robert J. Donia‘s new book Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide (Cambridge University Press, 2014)is an excellent step in this direction. Donia takes advantage of a remarkable depth of sources, including wiretap records of the phone calls Karadzic made with leading officials in Bosnia and Yugoslavia, to paint a compelling picture of a man transformed by conflict. His argument is simple, that it was the events of the late 1980s and especially early 1990s that made Karadzic into a nationalist willing to employ ethnic cleansing and genocidal massacres in his quest to secure safety and power for his people. In elevating Kardzic, Donia revises our understanding of the role and guilt of Slobodan Milosevic. His argument is detailed and well-supported, made even more compelling by Donia’s recollections of his encounters with Karadzic when Donia was a witness at before the ICTY. It’s a book anyone interested in understanding what happened in the former Yugoslavia will have to read and engage. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Eastern European Studies
Robert J. Donia, “Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide” (Cambridge UP, 2014)

New Books in Eastern European Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2015 67:29


As a graduate student at Ohio State in the early 1990s, I remember watching the collapse of Yugoslavia on the news almost every night and reading about it in the newspaper the next day.The first genocidal conflict covered in real time, dozens of reporters covered the war from the front lines or from a Sarajevo under siege. Not surprisingly, the media coverage was accompanied by a flood of memoirs and histories trying to explain the wars to a population that, at least in the US, knew little to nothing about the region. These were valuable studies–informative, interesting and often emotionally shattering. Istill assign them in classes today. But histories of the present, to steal a phrase from Timothy Garton Ash, are always incomplete and impressionistic.They lack both the opportunity to engage primary sources and the perspective offered by distance. Twenty years on, we’re now in a position to begin to reexamine and rethink many of the conclusions drawn in the midst of the conflict. Robert J. Donia‘s new book Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide (Cambridge University Press, 2014)is an excellent step in this direction. Donia takes advantage of a remarkable depth of sources, including wiretap records of the phone calls Karadzic made with leading officials in Bosnia and Yugoslavia, to paint a compelling picture of a man transformed by conflict. His argument is simple, that it was the events of the late 1980s and especially early 1990s that made Karadzic into a nationalist willing to employ ethnic cleansing and genocidal massacres in his quest to secure safety and power for his people. In elevating Kardzic, Donia revises our understanding of the role and guilt of Slobodan Milosevic. His argument is detailed and well-supported, made even more compelling by Donia’s recollections of his encounters with Karadzic when Donia was a witness at before the ICTY. It’s a book anyone interested in understanding what happened in the former Yugoslavia will have to read and engage. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Robert J. Donia, “Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide” (Cambridge UP, 2014)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2015 67:29


As a graduate student at Ohio State in the early 1990s, I remember watching the collapse of Yugoslavia on the news almost every night and reading about it in the newspaper the next day.The first genocidal conflict covered in real time, dozens of reporters covered the war from the front lines or from a Sarajevo under siege. Not surprisingly, the media coverage was accompanied by a flood of memoirs and histories trying to explain the wars to a population that, at least in the US, knew little to nothing about the region. These were valuable studies–informative, interesting and often emotionally shattering. Istill assign them in classes today. But histories of the present, to steal a phrase from Timothy Garton Ash, are always incomplete and impressionistic.They lack both the opportunity to engage primary sources and the perspective offered by distance. Twenty years on, we’re now in a position to begin to reexamine and rethink many of the conclusions drawn in the midst of the conflict. Robert J. Donia‘s new book Radovan Karadzic: Architect of the Bosnian Genocide (Cambridge University Press, 2014)is an excellent step in this direction. Donia takes advantage of a remarkable depth of sources, including wiretap records of the phone calls Karadzic made with leading officials in Bosnia and Yugoslavia, to paint a compelling picture of a man transformed by conflict. His argument is simple, that it was the events of the late 1980s and especially early 1990s that made Karadzic into a nationalist willing to employ ethnic cleansing and genocidal massacres in his quest to secure safety and power for his people. In elevating Kardzic, Donia revises our understanding of the role and guilt of Slobodan Milosevic. His argument is detailed and well-supported, made even more compelling by Donia’s recollections of his encounters with Karadzic when Donia was a witness at before the ICTY. It’s a book anyone interested in understanding what happened in the former Yugoslavia will have to read and engage. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices