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(published in: Aug, 2010)
With regard to the historic perspective of Vojvodina, we have distinguished several periods of time limited to historical events of higher importance, assuming, at the same time, that continuity in the interaction with newly established circumstances was subject to both changes and preservation of certain values. The first period deals with the establishment of Vojvodina and its political life in the Habsburg/Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. In this time the recognition of Vojvodina identity was linked to the Serb national movement that oscillated within political amplitude from national romanticism to rigid national politics of the monarchy with frequent turns to the principality/Kingdom of Serbia. The second period in the history of defining Vojvodina...
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(published in: Mar, 2010)
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(published in: Mar, 2010)
The paper deals with the chaotic situation in which the language formerly known as Serbo-Croatian finds itself in at the turn of the centuries.
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(published in: Jan, 2010)
Identity is usually defined by the formula A=A. What does that mean? According to Heidegger (1968), this formula represents the equality of A and A. The latter requires at least two terms, one A should be equal to another A. If someone says one and the same thing, i.e. a plant is a plant, this is tautology. One term is sufficient for tautology. Equality requires two terms. The common formula....
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(published in: Jan, 2010)
The new political situation in Europe displays a growing hostility toward Jews, immigrants and asylum seekers, Roma/Gypsies, and other minorities. Stereotypes are being dragged out and internal boundaries erected against foreigners. Both Western and Eastern Europe have witnessed episodes of ethnic conflict and 'ethnic cleansing.' Deteriorating economic conditions and weakening social cohesion arouse a fear of the future, and....
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(published in: Jan, 2010)
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(published in: Jan, 2010)
This paper is part of the 'Europe and the Balkans' Occasional Papers Series, published by the Istituto per l'Europa Centro-Orientale e Balcanica of the University of Bologna. Since the Second World War, Moldavia was the only Soviet Socialist Republic to have a reference State – Romania – outside the borders of the Soviet Union. This peculiarity emerged especially at the end of the 1980s.
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(published in: Apr, 2007)