MIGRANT CRISIS AS A SPECIFIC RISK MODERN EUROPE
Like any crisis in the human world, the migrant crisis can be approached without more comprehensive interpretations and deeper understanding. Nevertheless, recognizing intuitions at the first observations of European and Balkan "migrant events" is prudent, and beyond prejudice and pre-understanding, to search for the causes of the crisis. The ongoing migrant crisis has highlighted the need to create and implement a multidisciplinary model of understanding the 21st-century conflict. Models used so far halved from mega authorial theories and political doctrines, such as various pro-globalization or anti-globalization approaches, transitional neoliberal formulas, the pattern of "new world order," or "clash of civilizations," clashes of religions and cultures, world system, post-imperialism, various postmodern theories, doctrines of so-called soft and hard power, they have proven to be incompliant to events and therefore insufficient for a complete understanding of the contradictions and contradictions of the modern world. Historically, the current migrant crisis has regained the importance of questioning the spatial dimensions of the European populist configuration. The current and previous migrant problems have reminded classical and contemporary geopolitical theories of the original understanding of this approach to social and political phenomena, long overdue by Rudolf Kjellen. In one of the earliest divisions of geopolitics, a deserved place was found by demo politics. The focused demo-political reflection gains importance in situations of growing demographic problems. While geopolitics primarily encompasses processes of changes in space and area, demo politics touch on politically conditioned processes in the population. In seemingly chaotic demo politics, it reaffirmed the importance of a critical geopolitical interpretation of migrant processes. Even among the pro-non Eurocrats, for various ideological reasons, extremely inclined to specific geopolitical ideas and arrangements, it strengthened the sense of continental spatiality, accompanied by the knowledge that geopolitics "after all" has returned to European and world relations. In addition to many crises that have befallen Europe, the return of geopolitics has been contributed by the disruption sustained by the migrant wave. The current migrant crisis is a causal-consequential crisis, which means that as an already emerging disorder, it causes many other diseases that would not be without its effect. Still, it is also caused by factors that have previously shaped it and may not be known enough until this moment. The driving and emergence of the migrant crisis have occurred in the past; its modern development encompasses the present, and, likely, the migrant crisis will be faced by Europe in the future. Hence, it is necessary to bear in mind the concrete historical dimension of the problem, which also contains specific chrono-political components. When something is not understood as before at one time, the development usually enables that if it is to be understood in the consequential time.