Format:
1 Online-Ressource (xi, 228 Seiten)
,
Diagramme, Karten
Edition:
First edition
ISBN:
9781788317986
,
9781788317993
Content:
"What are the consequences of Yugoslavia's existence - and breakup - for the present? This book reflects on this very question, identifying and analysing the political legacies left behind by Yugoslavia through the prism of continuities and ruptures between the past and present of the area. After the collapse of Yugoslavia, it's former states adopted a nation-building process which opted to eradicate the past as such an approach seemed more convenient for the new national projects. The new states adopted new institutions, new market-oriented economic paradigms and new national symbols. Yugoslavia existed for 70 years and to consider the current political situation in post-Yugoslav states such as Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, and Kosovo without taking into account the legacy and remnants of Yugoslavia is to discount a vital part of their political history. This volume takes a multi-disciplinary and multi-faceted approach to examining the legacy of Yugoslavia, covering politics, society, international relations and economics. Focusing on distinctive features of Yugoslavia including worker self-management, the combination of liberalism and communism and the Cold War policy of Non-Alignment, The Legacy of Yugoslavia places Yugoslavia in historical perspective and connects the region's past with its contemporary political situation."
Note:
Mit Index
,
Angekündigt auch unter dem abweichenden Titel: "The political legacy of Yugoslavia"
,
Introduction (Othon Anastasakis, Adam Bennett, David Madden, Adis Merdzanovic) -- Part I. Politics and Society -- 1. Adis Merdzanovic (St Antony's College, Oxford): Liberalism in Yugoslavia: before and after the disintegration -- 2. Denisa Kostovicova (LSE), Adam Fagan (Queen Mary University, London), and Ivor Sokolic' (LSE): Civil society in post-Yugoslav space: The test of discontinuity and democratisation. -- 3. Catherine Baker (Hull University):Music, media and culture one generation after Yugoslavia: do we still need "nostalgia?" -- Part II: International Affairs -- 4. Ljubica Spaskovska (Exeter University): Transformations of global citizenship in the former Yugoslavia: The legacies of Yugoslav non-aligned multilateralism -- 5. James Ker-Lindsay (LSE):Between a Borderless Yugoslavia and a Europe without Borders: The Legacy of Territorial Disputes in the Western Balkans -- 6. Othon Anastasakis (St Antony's College, Oxford):Parallel trajectories and legacies of the past: Russia and Turkey in the Western Balkans -- Part III: Economics -- 7. Adam Bennett (St Antony's College, Oxford):Macroeconomic Stability and Enterprise -- Self-Management in Yugoslavia: An Impossible Marriage -- 8. Milica Uvalic (University of Perugia): What happened to the Yugoslav economic model? -- 9. Peter Sanfey (European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, EBRD): Are Yugoslav successor states on the path to sustainable market economies? -- Conclusion (Othon Anastasakis, Adis Merdzanovic, Adam Bennett and David Madden) -- Index. - Mode of access: World Wide Web
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-1-7883-1796-2
Language:
English
Subjects:
Political Science
Keywords:
Jugoslawien
;
Nachfolgestaaten
;
Gesellschaft
;
Politik
;
Wirtschaft
;
Geschichte 1945-
;
Konferenzschrift
DOI:
10.5040/9781788317986
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
Author information:
Anastasakis, Othon
Author information:
Merdzanovic, Adis
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