Preview

Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law

Advanced search

Identity and Secession: The Case of the Secession of Slovenia and Croatia from Yugoslavia

https://doi.org/10.23932/2542-0240-2021-14-1-4

Abstract

The secessions of Slovenia and Croatia – two interrelated and interdependent processes – put an end to the existence of the socialist federal Yugoslavia. The article examines the mutual influence of the identity transformations of the Slovenes and Croats in the second half of the 1980s – early 1990s and the disintegration of the SFRY. Historical and cultural background, the influence of socio-political conditions and the purposeful efforts of key actors to transform identities are analyzed.
It is shown that the main vector of changes in the identity of Slovenes and Croats in the second half of the 1980s – early 1990s favored secessions, but they were not predetermined. The influence of external factors was very strong, including, firstly, changes in the political landscape of Serbia and their echoes in the structures of power at the federal level, and, secondly, the approaching collapse of the political regime in the USSR and other countries of Eastern Europe, and also the end of the Cold War.
The actions of political leaders were of particular importance for the transformations in the sphere of identity. Thanks to their efforts, the secessionist strategies strongly affected the identities of Slovenes and Croats. But in Croatia, with the coming to power of F. Tudjman and the Croatian Democratic Union, practically the entire system of government bodies began to function in the regime of a “nationalizing state” (R. Brubaker).

About the Author

D. V. Efremenko
Institute of Scientific Information for Social Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (INION RAN)
Russian Federation

Dmitry V. Efremenko - DSc in Politics, Deputy Director

117997, Nakhimovskij Av., 51/21, Moscow



References

1. Abernethy D.B. (2000) The Dynamics of Global Dominance. European Overseas Empires, New Haven: Yale University Press.

2. Acemoglu D. et al. (2002) Reversal of Fortune: Geography and Institutions in the Making of the Modern World Income Distribution. Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 117, pp. 1231–1294. DOI: 10.1162/003355302320935025

3. Bagdasarov A.R. (2004) History of the Development of Croatian-Serbian Ethno-Linguistic Relations (1940–1990es XX century). Slavyanskiy Vestnik, Issue 2, Moscow: MAX Press, pp. 30–49 (in Russian).

4. Bebler A. (2017) Izzivi vojne in miru, Ljubljana: Fakulteta za družbene vede.

5. Bellamy A. (2013) The Formation of Croatian National Identity. A Centuries-Old Dream? Manchester: Manchester University Press.

6. Bertsch G.K. (1977) Ethnicity and Politics in Socialist Yugoslavia. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. 433, no 1, pp. 88–99. DOI: 10.1177/000271627743300109

7. Bhabha H.K. (1994) The Location of Culture, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

8. Bourdieu P. (1990) In Other Words. Essays towards a Reflexive Sociology, Stanford: Stanford University Press.

9. Brown C.L. (ed.) (1996) Imperial Legacy. The Ottoman Inprint on the Balkans and the Middle East, New York: Columbia University Press.

10. Brubaker R. (1998) Myths and Misconceptions in the Study of Nationalism. The State of the Nation. Ernest Gellner and the Theory of Nationalism (ed. Hall J.), Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 272–306.

11. Collier R.B., Collier D. (1991) Shaping the Political Arena. Critical Junctures, the Labor Movement and Regime Dynamics in Latin America, Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press.

12. Dimitrova-Grajzl V. (2007) The Great Divide Revisited: Ottoman and Habsburg Legacies on Transition. KYKLOS, vol. 60, no 4, pp. 539–558. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6435.2007.00384.x

13. Efremenko D.V., Meleshkina E.Yu. (2020) Yugoslavian Metanarrative and Modern Yugonostalgia in the Western Balkans. Politex, vol. 16, no 1, pp. 78–100 (in Russian). DOI: 10.21638/spbu23.2020.105

14. Gross M. (2000) Izvorno pravaštvo – ideologija, agitacija, pokret, Zagreb: Golden marketing.

15. Guskova E. (2001) History of the Yugoslav Crisis (1990–2000), Moscow: Russkoe pravo / Rossijskij nauchnyj fond (in Russian).

16. Hobsbawm E.J. (1997) The End of Empires. After Empire: Multiethnic Societies and Nationbuilding. The Soviet Union, and the Russian, Ottoman and Habsburg Empires (eds. Barkey K., von Hagen M.), Boulder (Col.), Oxford: Westview press, pp. 12–18.

17. Hobsbawm E.J. (1998) Nations and Nationalism after 1780, Saint-Petersburg: Aleteya (in Russian).

18. Mann M. (2016) The Dark Side of Democracy. Explanation of Ethnic Cleansing, Moscow: Izdatel’stvo «Pyatyy Rim» (in Russian).

19. Mihailović K., Krestić V. (2017) “SANU Memorandum” After Thirty Years, Belgrade: NID kompanija “Novosti” (in Serbian).

20. Nacionalni sastav stanovništva SFR Jugoslavije (1981). Knijga I, Beograd: IŠP “Savremena administracija”.

21. Nikiforov K.V. (2011) Geopolitical Aspect of the Yugoslav Crisis. Yugoslavia in the XX Century. Essays on Political History, Moscow: Indrik, pp. 865–870 (in Russian).

22. Perovšek J. (2004) Srbi vladajo, Hrvati razpravljajo, Slovenci plačujejo: Mit in resničnost prve Jugoslavije. Časopis za zgodovino in narodopisje, vol. 75, no 2–3, pp. 405–427.

23. Pivovarenko A.A. (2013) Formation of Mass Media in Independent Croatia. Slavic Almanac: 2013, Moscow: Indrik, pp. 251– 255 (in Russian).

24. Pivovarenko A.A. (2014) Prerequisites for Croatia’s Exit from the SFRY. Republican Aspect. Bulletin of Slavic Cultures, no 3, pp. 50–68. Available at: https://www.elibrary.ru/download/elibrary_21970560_91603372.pdf, accessed 10.12.2020 (in Russian).

25. Ramet P. (1985) Apocalypse Culture and Social Change in Yugoslavia. Yugoslavia in the 1980s (ed. Ramet P.), Boulder (Col.): Westview Press, pp. 3–26.

26. Repe B. (2008) Regional Differences, Slovene National Identity, and the Foundation of the Slovenian State. Slovene Studies, vol. 30, no 2, pp. 255–263. Available at: https://journals.lib.washington.edu/index.php/ssj/article/viewFile/14774/12383, accessed 10.12.2020.

27. Romanenko S.A. (2000) Yugoslavia: Crisis, Decay, War. Formation of Independent States, Moscow: Moskovskij obschestvennyj nauchnyj fond (in Russian).

28. Starikova N.N. (2015) Slovenian Writers and the “Velvet Revolution”. Slavic Almanac: 2015, Issue 1–2, Moscow: Indrik, pp. 215–224 (in Russian).

29. Ugrešić D. (1994) The Culture of Lies. Index on Censorship, vol. 23, no 1–2, pp. 23–43.

30. Velikonja M. (2009) Lost in Transition. East European Politics and Societies, vol. 23, no 4, pp. 535–551.


Review

For citations:


Efremenko D.V. Identity and Secession: The Case of the Secession of Slovenia and Croatia from Yugoslavia. Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law. 2021;14(1):74-97. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.23932/2542-0240-2021-14-1-4

Views: 1357


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2542-0240 (Print)
ISSN 2587-9324 (Online)