Murtagh, E.

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  • Murtagh, E. (1)
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Achieving world peace: Views from Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece

Petrović, N.; Jovanović, Olja; Murtagh, E.; McCarthy, S.; Miheljak, V.; Polič, M.; Tsatsaroni, C.; Medvedeva, A.; Yalcinkaya, A.

(Springer New York, 2013)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Petrović, N.
AU  - Jovanović, Olja
AU  - Murtagh, E.
AU  - McCarthy, S.
AU  - Miheljak, V.
AU  - Polič, M.
AU  - Tsatsaroni, C.
AU  - Medvedeva, A.
AU  - Yalcinkaya, A.
PY  - 2013
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1730
AB  - In this chapter, we consider views on the
achievability of peace and reconciliation from
ordinary people from four countries: Russia,
Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece. Three of these
countries (all except Slovenia) are predominantly
Eastern Orthodox Christian. Two of them are in
the European Union (Slovenia and Greece), and
two of them were formerly in Yugoslavia.
Russians, Serbians, and Slovenians belong to the
Slavic group of nations, with common origin and
similar languages. These countries have speci fi c
recent history, geostrategic position, and social,
economic, and political situation that justi fi es
considering them as a region and analyzing
answers from their inhabitants in this chapter.
PB  - Springer New York
T2  - International Handbook of Peace and Reconciliation
T1  - Achieving world peace: Views from Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece
EP  - 520
SP  - 499
DO  - 10.1007/978-1-4614-5933-0_35
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Petrović, N. and Jovanović, Olja and Murtagh, E. and McCarthy, S. and Miheljak, V. and Polič, M. and Tsatsaroni, C. and Medvedeva, A. and Yalcinkaya, A.",
year = "2013",
abstract = "In this chapter, we consider views on the
achievability of peace and reconciliation from
ordinary people from four countries: Russia,
Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece. Three of these
countries (all except Slovenia) are predominantly
Eastern Orthodox Christian. Two of them are in
the European Union (Slovenia and Greece), and
two of them were formerly in Yugoslavia.
Russians, Serbians, and Slovenians belong to the
Slavic group of nations, with common origin and
similar languages. These countries have speci fi c
recent history, geostrategic position, and social,
economic, and political situation that justi fi es
considering them as a region and analyzing
answers from their inhabitants in this chapter.",
publisher = "Springer New York",
journal = "International Handbook of Peace and Reconciliation",
booktitle = "Achieving world peace: Views from Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece",
pages = "520-499",
doi = "10.1007/978-1-4614-5933-0_35"
}
Petrović, N., Jovanović, O., Murtagh, E., McCarthy, S., Miheljak, V., Polič, M., Tsatsaroni, C., Medvedeva, A.,& Yalcinkaya, A.. (2013). Achieving world peace: Views from Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece. in International Handbook of Peace and Reconciliation
Springer New York., 499-520.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5933-0_35
Petrović N, Jovanović O, Murtagh E, McCarthy S, Miheljak V, Polič M, Tsatsaroni C, Medvedeva A, Yalcinkaya A. Achieving world peace: Views from Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece. in International Handbook of Peace and Reconciliation. 2013;:499-520.
doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-5933-0_35 .
Petrović, N., Jovanović, Olja, Murtagh, E., McCarthy, S., Miheljak, V., Polič, M., Tsatsaroni, C., Medvedeva, A., Yalcinkaya, A., "Achieving world peace: Views from Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Greece" in International Handbook of Peace and Reconciliation (2013):499-520,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5933-0_35 . .