Bosnia and Herzegovina
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.
Map
Topics
Persons
Pete Hegseth
Jake Sullivan
Marco Rubio
Mojtaba Khamenei
María Corina Machado
Herzi Halevi
Mark Rutte
Oleksii Reznikov
Mohammed Deif
Locations
Vatican City
Volnovakha
West Africa
Western Europe
western-iran
world
Zagros Mountains
Points of Interest
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Articles
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