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Democratisation, nationalism and security in former Yugoslavia
Paul Latawski
and
Martin A. Smith

hallmarks of every aspect of ethnic culture, not just its ethno-history. Of these the best known and most important is language, since it so clearly marks off those who speak it from those who cannot and because it evokes a sense of immediate expressive intimacy among its speakers. The outstanding role played by philologists grammarians and lexicographers in so many nationalisms

in The Kosovo crisis and the evolution of post-Cold War European security
Open Access (free)
Surveillance and transgender bodies in a post-9/ 11 era of neoliberalism
Christine Quinan

http://freebeacon.com/issues/feds-spend-194788-to-study-how-transwomen-use-facebook/ (accessed 28 May 2015). Hines, S., 2007a. TransForming Gender: Transgender Practices of Identity, Intimacy and Care , Bristol: Policy Press. Hines, S., 2007b. ‘(Trans)Forming Gender: Social Change and Transgender Citizenship’, Sociological Research Online 12

in Security/ Mobility
A veiled threat
Thomas J. Butko

the fact that only they have been able to portray themselves as an authentic alternative to corrupt, inefficient and sometimes repressive regimes. According to Ayubi: A wide variety of groups are attracted to the Islamist thesis because . . . [it] imparts a certain sense of intimacy and assurance, and because they

in Redefining security in the Middle East
Alexis Heraclides
and
Ada Dialla

–97; Paterson, ‘United States Intervention in Cuba’, 341–61. 53 Quoted in Smith, The Spanish–American War , 32. For Martí’s negative assessment of the US, see L. A. Pérez, Jr, Cuba and the United States: Ties of Singular Intimacy (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2003), 77–81. 54 Offner, An Unwanted War , 3–4. 55

in Humanitarian intervention in the long nineteenth century