Croatian Concepts of Integration (CROSBI ID 74264)
Prilog u knjizi | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Čepulo, Dalibor ; Matković, Stjepan
engleski
Croatian Concepts of Integration
The administrative fragmentation of historical and ethnic ‘Croatian lands’ in the Habsburg Monarchy and the insufficient political power of the Croats affected the formation of diverse Croatian national integration ideologies in the ‘long 19th century’. The Yugoslav concept influenced the South Slavic unification in 1918, but experience with the unitary state under Serbian domination led to demands for an autonomous Croatian unit or independent state. The provisory Croatian autonomy of 1939–1941 and excessive fascist state between 1941–1945 were replaced by the autocratic crypto- centralist communist federation. The federation provided for constitutional autonomy of the republics and nations, but, in the end, endangered Croatia’s territorial integrity. The establishment of the Croatian state in 1991 was understood not only as a way out of this situation but also as an ‘escape from the Balkans’ and ‘re-integration’ into Central and Western Europe.
Croatian national integration, Croatian state-building, Croatian nation-building, Yugoslavia, dissolution of Yugoslav
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Podaci o prilogu
93-112.
objavljeno
10.54171/2022.mgih.doleritincec_5
Podaci o knjizi
The Development of European and Regional Integration Theories in Central European Countries
Magdolna, GEDEON ; Iván, HALÁSZ
Miskolc: Central European Academic Publishing (CEA Publishing)
2022.
978-615-6474-04-9