Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5074896 Geoforum 2007 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper provides an account of the humanitarian interventions enacted by the Croatian-American diaspora during the secessionist conflicts in Yugoslavia during the 1990s. Whilst undeniably an act of generosity towards 'distant strangers', actions such as these also represent a much more complex reality - they are an outcome of a complex set of relations and processes, in which the ethical choices of individuals become bound up with nationalist ideologies, geopolitical questions and, crucially, knowledge and understanding of distant events. In particular, this paper considers the ways in which generosity is mobilised through the framing of Balkan geopolitics through diasporic media. In so doing, it becomes possible to deepen the dialogue between work on geography and ethics on the one hand, and critical geopolitics on the other. In particular, the paper argues that due attention needs to be paid to the ways in which such 'networks of concern' are constructed in a variety of banal and mundane ways.

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