Slobodan Milošević

Why World War I still matters, 100 years after it began

One hundred years after the First World War, boundaries established after the armistice at the “eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh hour” still shape many of today’s conflicts. From ISIS’s invasion of Mosul to Boko Haram’s kidnapping of schoolgirls, GlobalPost co-founder Charles Sennott journeys from Iraq to Nigeria to the Balkans to Northern Ireland and the Holy Land to see how WWI’s history lives on, the lessons learned — and far too often not learned.

View of Grbavica, a neighborhood of Sarajevo, Bosnia.

How wars end part V: Bosnia

Conflict & Justice
Nebojsa Jovic is urging Serbs to boycott the Kosovo municipal elections. He says the government in Belgrade is betraying Serbs in Kosovo by telling them to vote.

Serbs in Kosovo say Serbia is abandoning them. Again.

Conflict & Justice

Devil’s Advocate: the Legacy of Jacques Verges

Conflict & Justice

Slaughter Nick for President … in Serbia

Arts, Culture & Media

Judo Athlete Not Allowed to Represent Kosovo in Olympics

Global Politics

Kosovo’s contested statehood has made the International Olympic Committee not allow Majlinda Kelmendi to represent her country at London 2012.

Serbia’s Exit Festival

Arts, Culture & Media

The Geo Quiz is looking for a Serbian city hosting one of Europe’s biggest music events.

Has Serbia’s Nationalism Gone Underground?

Global Politics

Has the Serbian nationalism been replaced by pragmatism, or is it lying dormant?

Serbia’s Die-Hard Nationalists

Conflict & Justice

Serb nationalism seems a thing of the past, but some ultra-nationalists still hold annual get-togethers.

The World

Gaddafi supporters in Serbia

Global Politics

Some Serbians who remember the NATO airstrikes on their country in 1999 are voicing their support for Libya and Muammr Gaddafi. Nate Tabak reports from Belgrade.