Yugoslavs

Yugoslavs or Yugoslavians (Croatian: Jugoslaveni, Serbian and Macedonian Jugosloveni/Југословени; Slovene: Jugoslovani) is a designation that was originally designed to refer to a united South Slavic people. It has been used in two connotations, the first in an ethnic or supra-ethnic connotation, and the second as a term for citizens of the former Yugoslavia. Cultural and political advocates of Yugoslav identity have historically ascribed the identity to be applicable to all people of South Slav heritage, including those of modern Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia. Attempts at uniting Bulgaria into Yugoslavia were however unsuccessful and therefore …

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Publications

AUP: Athabasca University Press · 15 August 2023 English

From the continental inland of green valleys and plum orchards to the austere, skeletal coast, Tony Fabijančić captures Yugoslavia and Croatia in this moving memoir about his journey of discovery, …

back. In later years rode a bicycle. Like many Yugoslavs, he was a factory worker in the mornings, a peasant spokes of a thousand bicycles. 4 See Wendy Zentz, “Yugoslavs Claim Bit of White House,” South Florida Sun


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 15 July 2023 English

After World War II displaced more than sixty million people, Cold War politics opened global eyes and wallets to European displaced persons. The postwar experiences of more than three million …

Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Russians, Belarusians, Jews, Yugoslavs, Czechs, and others – lived side by side with


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 15 January 2023 English

After a summit in Belgrade in September 1961, socialist Yugoslavia, led by President Josip Broz Tito until his death in 1980, initiated a movement with states in the Global South. …

had gathered on the island strengthened the Yugoslavs’ case that an important statement should result a greater de- gree of formality, although the Yugoslavs resisted growing calls for a perma- nent secretariat


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 26 July 2022 English

Much of today’s international order can be traced to the experimentations with governance that occurred in central Europe immediately after World War I. And though Western governments did not bring …

determination of nations. Émigré representatives of the Yugoslavs, Czechoslovaks, and Poles were most prominent Eastern Europe, principally the Czechoslovaks and Yugoslavs, were carrying on similar campaigns, which may the Allied cause, unlike the Czechoslovaks and Yugoslavs.119 The relative fortunes of different émigré émigré groups are also revealing. The Yugoslavs’ lobbying, for instance, won the private sympathy of the


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 15 September 2021 English

The Precarious Lives of Syrians reveals the vulnerability and insecurity that Syrian refugees confront in Turkey, including their socio-legal status, living conditions, and mobility. Drawing on legal and scholarly materials, …

Lithuanians, Poles, Serbians, Ukrainians, and Yugoslavs) remained in Germany, Austria, Italy, and other


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 18 February 2021 English

Civilians at the Sharp End follows the story of the Civil Affairs branch through France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany in 1944–45. Borys demonstrates that while the Canadian Army was …

deserters, escaped Allied pris- oners of war, even Yugoslavs and Russians. Broadly speaking the Allies divided


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 20 February 2020 English

In less than half a century, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia successfully defeated Fascist occupation, fended off dominating pressures from the Eastern and Western blocs, built a modern society …

crime Beri, my dear mama and tata, and all true Yugoslavs Figures ix Acknowledgments xv Introduction aesthetic embodiment of the efforts made by the Yugoslavs to move away from the dangers of the growing Močnik’s argument therefore dispels the idea that Yugoslavs are dis- posed toward violence and cruelty, while


INN: Inanna Publications and Education Inc. · 30 August 2015 English

Amity provides a window to the wreckage caused by wars - the destruction and displacement that leave pain and life-long psychological disorders, here specifically within the contexts of Yugoslavia's dissolution …

other important point I saw was that our people, Yugoslavs, were avidly buying them and using them against


Wilson Center Canada · 14 April 2015 English

The support of the MacArthur Foundation allowed for the translation of many of the documents included in the appendix, as well as for the publication of this volume. [...] The …

were actually the most revisionist after the Yugoslavs, because we preserved private ownership of land mines, which Ana assures me were planted by the Yugoslavs and not by the Albanians, but they did know about to give up coming here due to this reason [the Yugoslavs], because this would not correspond with our own Xiaoping at the reception two nights before, the Yugoslavs said they wished to improve the relationships also was an official declaration, whereby the Yugoslavs condemned the American intervention and aerial


Wilson Center Canada · 24 September 2013 English

Ever since the outbreak of the Cold War, academic debates on the origins and characteristics of the Cold War have dominated the field of contemporary history. [...] The aim of …

diplomatic offensive to get the Soviets, the Yugoslavs, and others, to lessen arms shipments to the MPLA


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