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exist a number of obstacles particularly for Turkey to overcome on its path to accession, a process
that may continue until 2020, by which time the world is likely to look a very different place. Despite
the goodwill of most of the EU 25 member states for Turkish accession, the issue of the Union's
'absorption capacity' for further enlargement was raised at the start of negotiations in October 2005
(e.g. Watt and Smith, 2005). One suspects that this concept will take on a dynamic of its own in the
months and years ahead.
References
Hall, D. (ed.) (1991) Tourism and Economic Development in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. Lon-
don: Belhaven Press.
Hall, D. (2000) Croatia. In: Hall, D. and Danta, D. (eds) EuropeGoesEast:EUEnlargement,Diversityand
Uncertainty. London: The Stationery Office, pp. 275-288.
Hall, D. and Danta, D. (1996) The Balkans: perceptions and realities. In: Hall, D. and Danta, D. (eds)
Reconstructing the Balkans: a Geography of the New Southeast Europe.Chichester, UK: John
Wiley & Sons, pp. 1-13.
Jordan, P. (2000) Restructuring Croatia's coastal resorts: change, sustainable development and the
incorporation of rural hinterlands. Journal of Sustainable Tourism8(6), 525-539.
Tanner, M. (1997) Croatia: a Nation Forged in War. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
Todorova, M. (1994) The Balkans: from discovery to invention. Slavic Review53, 453-482.
Todorova, M. (1997) Imagining the Balkans. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Watt, N. and Smith, H. (2005) Sweet and sour climax to Turkey's long march. The Guardian, 4 October,
p. 14.
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