Bosnia and Herzegovina

Location:

Intro

The country’s tripartite power-sharing model reflects the legacy of the 1992-1995 war. Bosnia is supervised by an international High Representative and aspires to EU and NATO membership. Economic growth is modest and heavily dependent on remittances.

Background

The Dayton Peace Agreement (1995) ended one of Europe’s bloodiest post-Cold War conflicts. Ethnic division persists through parallel institutions in the Federation and Republika Srpska. EU integration is gradual, constrained by governance reform and external influence from Serbia and Russia.

History

  • 1992: Independence and start of Bosnian War – 1995: Dayton Peace Agreement establishes federal structure – 2004: NATO-led stabilization mission replaced by EUFOR – 2022: EU candidate status granted – 2020s: Ongoing reform and national unity efforts

Present Day

In 2025, Bosnia navigates between stagnation and gradual EU reform under renewed regional mediation. Security remains stable but fragile under external pressure from Russia and local nationalist movements.

Future Outlook

Progress toward EU integration depends on constitutional reform and centralized governance. Sustained international oversight remains necessary for stability.

Population
3518541

Map

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Persons

Pete Hegseth

Pete Hegseth

1980–present

Jake Sullivan

1976–present
Marco Rubio

Marco Rubio

1971–present
Mojtaba Khamenei

Mojtaba Khamenei

1969–present
Mark Rutte

Mark Rutte

1967–present
María Corina Machado

María Corina Machado

1967–present

Herzi Halevi

1967–present

Oleksii Reznikov

1966–present

Oleksandr Syrskyi

1965–present
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Locations

Mainland China

Pop.
1400000000
China

China

Pop.
1379860000

India

Pop.
1328024498

North America

Pop.
500000000

United States

Pop.
321815121

Indonesia

Pop.
261799249

Pakistan

Pop.
217290883

Bangladesh

Pop.
159383179
Russia

Russia

Pop.
144104080

Japan

Pop.
127141000
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Articles

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The Hong Kong fire will change China’s Real Estate sector

China’s real estate sector is shaped by deeper pressures than market cycles alone.
Demographics, oversight consistency, due-diligence gaps and investment confidence now intersect in ways that define the sector’s next phase.

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Books To read for summer 2025

A summer reading list for those tracing the fractures of empire, freedom, and the European condition.

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Event Timeline

27 April 1951
1999-3 January 2026
2026-01-03
1841-01-26
1842-08-29

Treaty of Nanking Signed

The Treaty of Nanking ended the First Opium War and ceded Hong Kong Island to Britain, formalizing its colonial status.

1860-10-24

Kowloon Peninsula Ceded to Britain

The Convention of Peking ceded the southern part of the Kowloon Peninsula to Britain, extending colonial Hong Kong beyond the island.

1898-06-09
1898

Kowloon Walled City Preserved

Britain leases the New Territories for 99 years but allows China to retain nominal control of the Kowloon Walled City.

1941
1945-08-30