Elise Féron
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Fatma Güven Lisaniler
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The Cyprus conflict in a comparative perspective
Assessing the impact of European integration
in Cyprus
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This chapter analyses the effectiveness in the European Union's (EU) methods in conflict resolution. It delves into three conflict cases, with a particular emphasis on the Cyprus conflict, in which EU played a role as a third party: Bosnia, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Cyprus. All three conflicts are characterised by competing claims to the rights of self-determination, sovereignty, ethnic identity and territorial integrity, and by the effort of international mediators to resolve these competing claims. While Bosnia and Macedonia are post-Cold War conflicts, Cyprus is a particularly intractable conflict, whose origins date back to the decolonisation period. The EU became involved in different phases and to different degrees in these three conflicts, and in all three the prospects of EU membership have played a catalytic role, insofar as all the primary parties to these conflicts could and did turn to the EU to satisfy their competing interests.

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Cyprus

A conflict at the crossroads

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