THE REVOLUTION AND THE FEDERAL ORDER Cover Image

РЕВОЛУЦИЈА И ФЕДЕРАТИВНИ ПОРЕДАК
THE REVOLUTION AND THE FEDERAL ORDER

Author(s): Dimitrije Kulić
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Philosophy, Philosophical Traditions, Marxism
Published by: Правни факултет Универзитета у Београду

Summary/Abstract: The Yugoslav federal state was created during the socialist revolution on the basis of a new relation between peoples — a revolutionary movement which in the people's liberalization uprising and revolution constitued into a federal structure and federal order. This was the marxist approach in the sense and form of a specific road of the Yugoslav revolution, the road and form of the creation of the new Yugoslav federal state. The act of self-determination in Yugoslavia was realized on the question of class struggle, on the solution of the question of power as the decisive question of the revolution. On that class basis of the struggle for power of the working people of Yugoslavia the revolutionary order as a federal order was established. Joining the Yugoslav revolution for the liberation from the occupiers, for the creation of the Yugoslav Federation, the Yugoslav peoples, with thier joining of the armed struggle, have realised the self-determination of liberation, when the people uprise and when they give this right to themselves. Tito’s vision of brotherhood and unity held deep within it the mutual link of the Yugoslav peoples in the Yugoslav-revolutionary federal order and revolution as a whole. The creation of every particular republic and province was, in effect, the condition and result of the Yugoslav federal phenomena, the result and content of the federal act of the Yugoslav Federation, and not some separate, isolated, alienated structure, which created and creates „itself”. The creation of our socialist republics and provinces was not for conserving of nations, but also for surpassing the contradictions among them, for thier getting together and uniting in the development of a democratic self-management order.

  • Issue Year: 32/1984
  • Issue No: 1-2
  • Page Range: 101-106
  • Page Count: 6
  • Language: Serbian