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oapen-20.500.12657-307512024-03-25T09:51:41Z Chapter 7 Where is My State? Citizenship as a Factor in Yugoslavia’s Disintegration Štiks, Igor citizenship democratization citizenship factor disintegration ethnic nationalism citizenship democratization citizenship factor disintegration ethnic nationalism Breakup of Yugoslavia Croatia Serbia Serbs Slobodan Miloševic Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JP Politics and government Chapter 7 shows that citizenship has to be counted as one of the crucial factors of Yugoslavia’s disintegration. The fundamental questions of citizenship related to the very definition of membership in a political community as well as the citizenship contract by which citizen exchanges his loyalty and duties for the rights and protection by his political community and its institutions (state) influenced critically the democratization process and Yugoslavia’s disintegration. At the crucial junction, in the context of imminent redefinition and possible collapse of federal Yugoslavia, between early 1990 and early 1992, citizens were asking themselves these basic questions: To what political community do I belong? or, to whom do I owe my loyalty? And, finally, who (what state?) guarantees, or promises to guarantee my rights – starting with human, civic and political rights, employment and property … – and, last but not least, security? The ethnonational conception of citizenship, the chapter argues, finally prevailed and fuelled conflicts over the redefinition of borders within which the ethnonational states were to be formed on the basis of absolute majorities of the core ethnonational groups. 2018-08-08 11:46:30 2020-04-01T13:09:16Z 2020-04-01T13:09:16Z 2015 chapter 642978 OCN: 1076660363 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/30751 eng application/pdf n/a 642978.pdf https://www.bloomsburycollections.com/book/nations-and-citizens-in-yugoslavia-and-the-post-yugoslav-states-one-hundred-years-of-citizenship/ch7-where- Bloomsbury Academic Nations and Citizens in Yugoslavia and the Post-Yugoslav States 10.5040/9781474221559.ch-008 10.5040/9781474221559.ch-008 066d8288-86e4-4745-ad2c-4fa54a6b9b7b 652c73a7-2e3d-4da9-8af8-4cde5d8e61a4 FP7 Ideas: European Research Council European Research Council (ERC) 119-132 13 London 8 230239 FP7 open access
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Chapter 7 shows that citizenship has to be counted as one of the crucial factors of Yugoslavia’s disintegration. The fundamental questions of citizenship related to the very definition of membership in a political community as well as the citizenship contract by which citizen exchanges his loyalty and duties for the rights and protection by his political community and its institutions (state) influenced critically the democratization process and Yugoslavia’s disintegration. At the crucial junction, in the context of imminent redefinition and possible collapse of federal Yugoslavia, between early 1990 and early 1992, citizens were asking themselves these basic questions: To what political community do I belong? or, to whom do I owe my loyalty? And, finally, who (what state?) guarantees, or promises to guarantee my rights – starting with human, civic and political rights, employment and property … – and, last but not least, security? The ethnonational conception of citizenship, the chapter argues, finally prevailed and fuelled conflicts over the redefinition of borders within which the ethnonational states were to be formed on the basis of absolute majorities of the core ethnonational groups.
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Bloomsbury Academic
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2018
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https://www.bloomsburycollections.com/book/nations-and-citizens-in-yugoslavia-and-the-post-yugoslav-states-one-hundred-years-of-citizenship/ch7-where-
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