Serbia and the European Union, political relationships, Yugoslavia, Balkan peninsula, border quarrels, ethnic tensions, SAA Stabilization and Association Agreement, Schengen countries, Kosovo, Brexit
Serbia also officially called the Republic of Serbia is a small sovereign state whose capital city is Belgrade. On June 5 of 2006, the Republic of Serbia was created after the independence of Montenegro which composed a federation (Serbia and Montenegro) since 2003 after the disruption of Yugoslavia. Serbia has a population of 7 million (8.9 M by including Kosovo) Serbia is strategically positioned in the Balkan Peninsula. Despite Serbia is a landlocked country, its good relations with Montenegro allow them to keep an access to the Adriatic Sea. Moreover, Serbia's central position over Europe, coupled with the fact that it borders with eight different countries (Romania, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hungary, Albania, Kosovo, Bulgaria, Macedonia) and is crossed by the Danube River, make it a strategic crossroads for trade between Western and Eastern Europe.
[...] Relationships between Serbia and the European Union Introduction Serbia also officially called the Republic of Serbia is a small sovereign state which capital city is Belgrade. On June 5 of 2006, the Republic of Serbia was created after the independence of Montenegro which composed a federation (Serbia and Montenegro) since 2003 after the disruption of Yugoslavia. Serbia has a population of 7 million ( 8.9 M by including Kosovo) Serbia is strategically positioned in the Balkan Peninsula. Despite Serbia is a landlocked country, its good relations with Montenegro allow them to keep an access to the Adriatic Sea. [...]
[...] London: Routledge Print. Part Theorical and comparative approaches Cross-border minorities and European Integration in South-eastern Europe: The Hungarians and Serbs compared (p179-184). ESSCA library Press Articles: RETTMAN, ANDREW. "Serb Minister Love-bombs EU." EU observer. N.p Feb Google Zivanovic, Maja. "Serbs Doubt Prospect of EU Membership, Survey Shows." Balkan Insight. N.p Mar Google Other sources: "Accession of Serbia to the European Union." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation Mar Web Mar "Chronology of Relations between the Republic of Serbia and the European Union." Mfa.gov.rs. [...]
[...] Stabilisation and Association Agreement (2005-2008) In 2003, Serbia was named as a potential candidate for EU membership during the Thessaloniki European Council summit. The negotiations of Serbia's Stabilization and Association Agreement (SAA) started in November 2005. The principal aim of this agreement was to prepare each country who desired to join the EU to answer each peculiarities that the EU ask for. SAA's are based mostly on the EU's acquis communautaire and predicated on its promulgation in the cooperating states legislation. [...]
[...] Web Mar "Serbia." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation Mar Web Mar (www.dw.com), Deutsche Welle . "Serbia Kicks off EU Membership Talks, Sets 2020 as Target for Completion News DW.COM 21.01 .2014." DW.COM. N.p., n.d. Web Mar. 2017. [...]
[...] Web Mar "EU-Serbia Relations." EURACTIV.com. N.p Aug Web Mar "First Meeting of Special Group on Normalization of Relations with Serbia under EU-Kosovo SAA." European Western Balkans. N.p Mar Web Mar "Kosovo Agreement Clears Serbia's EU Path." EUobserver. N.p., n.d. Web Mar Rankin, Jennifer. "Russian Destabilisation of Balkans Rings Alarm Bells as EU Leaders Meet." The Guardian. Guardian News and Media Mar Web Mar "Serbia - European Neighbourhood Policy And Enlargement Negotiations - European Commission." European Neighbourhood Policy And Enlargement Negotiations. N.p., n.d. [...]
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