Review of the Study Centre for Yugoslav Affairs – 1972-10
Review of the Study Centre for Yugoslav Affairs – 1972-10
Contributor(s): Desimir Tochitch (Editor)
Subject(s): Post-War period (1950 - 1989)
Published by: CEEOL Digital Reproductions / Collections
Keywords: History of Tito's Yugoslavia;
Series: CEEOL COLLECTION related to YUGOSLAVIA
- Page Count: 82
- Publication Year: 1972
- Language: English
A Decade of Reviewing Yugoslav Affairs
A Decade of Reviewing Yugoslav Affairs
(A Decade of Reviewing Yugoslav Affairs)
- Author(s):Author Not Specified
- Language:English
- Subject(s):Interwar Period (1920 - 1939)
- Page Range:835-839
- No. of Pages:5
- Summary/Abstract:In presenting the tenth issue of this Review to the public, on behalf of the Study Centre for Jugoslav Affairs, the Editors consider it their duty to direct a few words to their readers.
- Price: 4.00 €
The Yugoslav Crisis and the Mediterranean
The Yugoslav Crisis and the Mediterranean
(The Yugoslav Crisis and the Mediterranean)
- Author(s):Ivan Stefan (Vane) Ivanović
- Language:English
- Subject(s):Interwar Period (1920 - 1939)
- Page Range:840-852
- No. of Pages:13
- Summary/Abstract:Due to the lack of political freedom and opportunity for self-expression, however, many individuals in Yugoslavia have come to voice a passionate and indiscriminate loyalty to the nation to which they happen to belong, largely as a substitute for their unsatisfied individual or group energies. These emotional factors have brought forth conflicts both great and small in many fields. These conflicts have reached their reductio ad absurdum in the current falling out between, on the one hand, those who claim that Serbian and Croatian have always been two separate languages, and that this should now be acknowledged, and, on the other hand their opponents who claim that Serbian and Croatian are merely two variants of the same tongue.
- Price: 8.80 €
The Workers’ Revolt in Poland and the Yugoslav Reactions
The Workers’ Revolt in Poland and the Yugoslav Reactions
(The Workers’ Revolt in Poland and the Yugoslav Reactions)
- Author(s):Andrzej Stypułkowski
- Language:English
- Subject(s):Social history, Interwar Period (1920 - 1939)
- Page Range:853-862
- No. of Pages:10
- Keywords:Polish workers' uprise;
- Summary/Abstract:Right from the beginning of the Polish December revolt the Jugoslav press and radio gave full coverage of the events. The first comments were restrained and avoided anything which could have looked provocative. As the situation developed, however, and along with the indirect criticism of Gomulka and his team in the Polish press, the Jugoslav commentators became more straightforward and began to voice their criticism of Poland under Gomulka. It was written that no system, ‘least of all the socialist one’, could feel satisfied by being ‘less bad than other systems’. Then Belgrade weekly Nedeljne informativne novine attempted to draw a lesson from the Polish events which took place between ‘two explosive crises: the 1956 crisis of Poznan, and the one which took place in Gdansk several days ago’. Gomulka was quoted, who in October 1956, had refused to accept the thesis that workers’ strikes were ‘deeds of foreign agents and provocateurs’. Gomulka, although anti-bureaucratically minded and full of ‘good intentions’, was not able to solve the problems because he had failed to change the system.
- Price: 8.80 €
New Words for Old Situations: Yugoslavia’s Defence System
New Words for Old Situations: Yugoslavia’s Defence System
(New Words for Old Situations: Yugoslavia’s Defence System)
- Author(s):Miodrag J. Djordjević
- Language:English
- Subject(s):Military policy, Interwar Period (1920 - 1939), Peace and Conflict Studies
- Page Range:863-874
- No. of Pages:12
- Summary/Abstract:Several years have elapsed since those heady days of the Czechoslovak crisis of August 1968, when it seemed all too likely that Yugoslavia and Roumania would prove the next victims of the Soviet Union. Since then up to the present day reports have appeared from time to time in the foreign press alleging that the Soviet Union has been trying to exert special pressure on Yugoslavia in an attempt to manoeuvre her into the Eastern bloc. Lately the same pressure has again been applied, and in consequence Yugoslavia was once more a focus of attention for the world’s press.
- Price: 8.80 €
Is the Crisis moving towards an Outcome?
Is the Crisis moving towards an Outcome?
(Is the Crisis moving towards an Outcome?)
- Author(s):Desimir Tochitch
- Language:English
- Subject(s):Interwar Period (1920 - 1939)
- Page Range:875-889
- No. of Pages:15
- Keywords:Marshal Tito; Yugoslav Crisis 1971;
- Summary/Abstract:Although Yugoslavia has, over the past twenty years, gone through many changes in its domestic policies, and made spectacular about-turns in its foreign policies, far from getting rid of its old problems, it seems rather to have created for itself new and more serious ones. One of the reasons for this is possibly to be found in the personality of President Tito himself, who, although often the initiator of change, has also avoided anything which could alter the system basically, and affect his own position. The latest changes—the constitutional reform finally enacted in June 1971 — indicate, however, that Marshal Tito is perhaps no longer always the decisive factor, as had hitherto been the case—for the last twenty-five years at the head of the country, and for the last thirty at the head of the Party. There was a noticeable difference between the gist of the reform such as it was announced by the president in his Zagreb speech of 21 September 1970,2 and what was contained in the constitutional amendments of 30 June 1971.
- Price: 8.80 €
LIKELY TO PROVOKE PUBLIC UNREST. Prosecutors Ban Publications
LIKELY TO PROVOKE PUBLIC UNREST. Prosecutors Ban Publications
(LIKELY TO PROVOKE PUBLIC UNREST. Prosecutors Ban Publications)
- Author(s):Author Not Specified
- Language:English
- Subject(s):Civil Society, Governance
- Page Range:890-893
- No. of Pages:4
- Summary/Abstract:During 1971 the distribution of one or several issues of numerous publications—ranging from internationally known scholarly journals to ephemeral student broadsheets—has been banned in Yugoslavia, temporarily or permanently, by decisions taken on the basis of the Law on the Press and Other Forms of Information. One of the favourite grounds for these injunctions has been that some of the writings contained 'alarmist statements likely to provoke public unrest'. The article provides the full text of one such instance signed by District Public Prosecutor Spasoje Milošev.
- Price: 4.00 €
Chronicle of Events — July-December 1970
Chronicle of Events — July-December 1970
(Chronicle of Events — July-December 1970)
- Author(s):Author Not Specified
- Language:English
- Subject(s):Interwar Period (1920 - 1939)
- Page Range:895-903
- No. of Pages:9
