Steven Majstorovic

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Steven Majstorovic (Cyrillic Стивен Мајсторовић), actually Majstorović (* 1946 , in a refugee camp in Germany) is an American political scientist .

Life

His father was a Bosnian Serb and spent three years in a German POW camp, his mother was Polish and spent four and a half years in a concentration camp.

After obtaining an MA in 1987 from the University of Montana and a Ph.D. In 1992 at the University of Colorado he was Assistant Professor of Political Science at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh , then at the University of Wisconsin in Eau Claire . His research areas are the comparison of political systems, nationalism and conflict research, especially in Eastern Europe and the Balkans.

In 1996/98 he published a controversial plan for the division of Kosovo between Serbs and Albanians. Later he spoke out in favor of a solution that would give both sides a European perspective.

Majstorovic has two children, his daughter Sofia is a mathematician and his son Shane is a molecular biologist .

Web links

Homepage of Steven Majstorovic

Individual evidence

  1. The Magazine Of The University of Montana, Class Notes, 80’s
  2. ^ Steven Majstorovic: Autonomy of the Sacred. The Endgame in Kosovo . In: Nationalism & Ethic Politics , Vol. 5 (1999), Issue 3/4, pp. 167-190, ISSN  1353-7113 .
  3. Partial Freedom Is Best for Kosovo . In: The New York Times , June 3, 1999
  4. Department of Political Science Alumni Newsletter, Faculty News, page 5  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as broken. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF)@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.uwec.edu