Further readings on frozen conflicts
Aggestam K., Björkdahl A. (2011). Just peace postponed: unending peace processes and frozen conflicts.
Bláhová, P. (2019). Nagorno-Karabakh: obstacles to the resolution of the frozen conflict. Asia Eur J. 17, 69-85
Blank, S. (2008). Russia and the Black Sea’s frozen conflicts in strategic perspective. Mediterr Q. 19(3), 23-54
Broers, L. (2015). From “frozen conflict” to enduring rivalry: reassessing the Nagorny Karabakh conflict. Nationalities Papers. 43(4), 556-576
Cornell, S. E. (ed.) (2017). The International Politics of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Conflict: The Original “Frozen Conflict” and European Security. Palgrave Macmillan, New York
Dembinska, M., Campana, A. (2017). Frozen conflicts and internal dynamics of de facto states: perspectives and directions for research. Int Stud Rev. 19(1), 1-25
Dembińska, M., Mérand, F. (2019). The role of international brokers in frozen conflicts: the case of transnistria. Asia Eur J. 17, 15-30
Ditrych, O. (2019). Georgia’s frosts: ethnopolitical conflict as assemblage. Asia Eur J. 17, 47-67
Faber, M. J. (2000). Cold Wars and Frozen Conflicts: The European Experience. In: Kaldor, M. (ed) Global Insecurity. Bloomsbury Academic, London, 53-94
Felician, S. (2011). North and South Korea: A Frozen Conflict on the Verge of Unfreezing?. IAI Working Papers 11/24
Fernández-Molina, I. (2019). Bottom-up change in frozen conflicts: Transnational struggles and mechanisms of recognition in Western Sahara. Review of International Studies, 45(3), 407-430
Fernández-Molina, I., Porges, M. (2019). Western Sahara. Routledge Handbook of State Recognition, 376-390
Fregoso, C. C., Zivkovic, N. (2012). Western Sahara: a frozen conflict. Journal of Regional Security 7(2), 139-150
Ganguly, S., Smetana, M., Abdullah, S. et al. (2019). India, Pakistan, and the Kashmir dispute: unpacking the dynamics of a South Asian frozen conflict. Asia Eur J, 17, 129-143
Grzelczyk, V. (2019). Threading on thin ice? Conflict dynamics on the Korean Peninsula. Asia Eur J, 17, 31-45
Japaridze, T., Rondeli, A. (2004). Europe is on Georgia’s mind. In: Asmus, R. D., Dimitrov, K., Forbrig, J. (eds). A new Euro-Atlantic strategy for the Black Sea region. German Marshall Fund of the United States, Washington, D.C., 40-47
Lynch, D. (2004). Engaging Eurasia's Separatist States: Unresolved Conflicts and De Facto States. United States Institute of Peace Press, Washington, D.C.
Lynch, D. (2005). New thinking about 'frozen' conflicts. Hels Monit 16(3), 192-195
Morar, F. (2010). The Myth of 'Frozen Conflicts': Transcending Illusive Dilemmas. per Concordiam: Journal of European Security and Defence Issues 1(2)
Perry, V. (2009). At cross purposes? Democratization and peace implementation strategies in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s frozen conflict. Hum Rights Rev 10(1), 35-54
Perry, V. (2019). Frozen, stalled, stuck, or just muddling through: the post-Dayton frozen conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Asia Eur J, 17, 107-127
Souleimanov, E. A., Abbasov, N., Siroky, D. S. (2019). Frankenstein in Grozny: vertical and horizontal cracks in the foundation of Kadyrov’s rule. Asia Eur J, 17, 87-103
Tudoroiu, T. (2016). Unfreezing failed frozen conflicts: a post-Soviet case study. J Contemp Eur Stud, 24(3), 375-396
Welt, C. (2010). The thawing of a frozen conflict: the internal security dilemma and the 2004 prelude to the Russo-Georgian War. Eur Asia Stud, 62(1), 63-97
Wolff, S. (2011). A resolvable frozen conflict? Designing a settlement for Transnistria. Nationalities Papers, 39(6), 863-870