British Foreign Policy in former Yugoslavia 1989-1999: Brotherhood and Unity Lost, gives a broad analysis of Britain s foreign policy during the wars of Yugoslav secessions from 1992 to 1999. Normative approaches to Britain s foreign policy during this period have tended to place it in to two halves. The notion, there was a new morality in Britain s foreign policy appeared after New Labour s election landslide on 1 May 1997. Robin Cook declared shortly after the victory there would be an ethical dimension to Labour s foreign policy, and this appeared to chart new territory. As a result, this would be a departure from what former US Assistant Secretary of State, James Rubin, believed was the hyper-realism of the traditional British kind under British Prime Minister, John Major. The book includes interviews with key actors, provides new archive material and re-examines claims by the New Orthodoxy which became prevalent after 1999.