UDC 321.01(497.6)
Biblid: 0025-8555, 70(2018)
Vol. 70, No 2, pp. 181-207
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2298/MEDJP1802181L

Оriginal article
Received: 24 Jul 2018
Accepted: 20 Aug 2018

LIMITATIONS OF THE CONCEPT OF STATE-BUILDING: THE CASE OF BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA

LAZIĆ Vuk (Istraživač-pripravnik u Institutu za međunarodnu politiku i privredu, Beograd), vuk.lazic@diplomacy.bg.ac.rs

The paper discusses the dynamics of state-building in Bosnia and Herzegovina, with the focus on the analysis of the structural disadvantages of the concept and its implementation in the post-conflict environment. The case of Bosnia and Herzegovina represents a research case within this area study because it is a heterogeneous and divided society, with complicated historical and ongoing relations between local political actors, the complex structure of the political system, and the increasingly contested role of the international factor in the statebuilding process. The analysis of the local political dynamics established during the state-building process clearly shows the conflict between the international and local actors. The performance of the High Representative as the most important international actor in the state-building process has caused the increasing resistance of local political actors to the implementation of the statebuilding. The author emphasizes that the legitimacy deficit and the lack of accountability of the international community, the domination of the authoritarian mode of governance, and the insistence on an integrative strategy that neglects the positions, interests and motives of local actors are the major causes of the failure of the international community project. Since Bosnia and Herzegovina still heavily depends on the international actors, the failure of the state-building process would have far-reaching negative consequences for the political stability and the future of the state.

Keywords: state-building, peace-building, international community, Bosnia and Herzegovina