"Professor Keith Doubt has produced a sociological analysis of the impact of Bosnia's drama on the modern world of liberal democracy. The result is a book which contributes outstandingly to the comprehension of events in Bosnia and to the identification of current inaccuracies of interpretation. This book is of crucial importance to all efforts to prevent the only temporarily arrested tragedy of Bosnia from sinking into undeserved oblivion." --Rusmir Mahmutcehajic, president of International Forum Bosnia "This brief work should be read not only by sociologists but by other social scientists such as historians, anthropologists, political scientists. The book is an extremely good text from which to debate some of the essence of sociological theory, and explian it, while focusing on real issues, not only of Bosnia and Kosovo, but, by extention, other fields of conflict in which TV, the press, and popular and immediate writing from public opinion." -- H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online " Sociology after Bosnia and Kosovo is a powerful reminder that we need to continue to wrestle with the idea of justice, rather than setting for a facile pragmatism or cynicism that only contended with justice on a superficial level." -- Human Rights Review "This book is engaging and provocative." -- Slavic Review "Few sociologists reach across such a range of topics as does Keith Doubt.
Sociology After Bosnia and Kosovo displays his gift for rethinking theory in relation to one of the world's trouble spots. I recommend this book for anyone eager to see sociology in a surprisingly fresh way." --Charles Lemert, University Professor of Social Theory, Emeritus, Wesleyan University.