This study analyzes circumstances tied to the implementation of the Dayton Agreement's provision for the reunification of Sarajevo. Three months after the signing, Sarajevo was again a united city territorially, but pre-war inhabitants of Sarajevo who identified themselves as Serbs were almost entirely absent from the reunited town under the control of the Federation government.
This article addresses the causes of the flight of the Serbs, who had been living in Sarajevo's suburbs before the start of the Bosnian war and stayed, in their view, to defend their homes. I argue that the incentives that led a majority of Sarajevan Serbs to leave the city and its surroundings were the result of actions not only of the Serb leadership but also of Bosniak leaders and the international community.
Our analysis is complementary to the scholarship examining the impact of massive population migrations and displacement in the aftermath of conflicts. I analyze the dynamics of Sarajevo's unification within the Federation and its consequences, demon- strating that once a partition is accepted at a higher level, it is almost impossible to prevent its emergence on a local level.