Download Revolutionary Totalitarianism, Pragmatic Socialism, by Gorana Ognjenović, Jasna Jozelić PDF

By Gorana Ognjenović, Jasna Jozelić

ISBN-10: 1137597429

ISBN-13: 9781137597427

ISBN-10: 1137597437

ISBN-13: 9781137597434

This ebook, the 1st of 2 volumes, demanding situations many years of superficial and selective rhetoric approximately Tito’s Yugoslavia. The essays discover a number of the gaps within the current descriptions of the rustic that experience existed for many years. participants disguise various themes together with the abolition of the multi-party procedure, nonalignment, and the 1968 reinforcing place between others.

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Extra resources for Revolutionary Totalitarianism, Pragmatic Socialism, Transition: Volume One, Tito's Yugoslavia, Stories Untold

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Along with this, it controlled the polling stations, the electoral commissions, the registration of the voters’ lists, the counting of votes, without monitoring from the opposition. The Army and other representatives of government coerced those who were reluctant to vote. Those who did not want to take part were threatened with loss of ration cards, pensions, apartments, and even life. The ballot boxes without lists were labeled “Ustaša boxes” or “black boxes”. Many boxes had narrow openings, so the rubber pellets could be heard dropping.

Among them were Ustaša, škripari, Chetniks, active Germans, CPP members, clerical fascists, priests, Yugoslavian nationalists, masons, and anglophiles. Besides a lack of cordiality toward the Partisan movement displayed by “enemies of the people” a common attitude was expressed for the wealthy. For the most part, these were owners of factories, workshops, stores, hotels, inns, drugstores, and dental offices. OZNA oversaw all state institutions and political organizations.  It prepared files for everyone that was employed.

During the war he attempted to show that other parties had joined the CPY in a struggle against the enemy. THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF YUGOSLAVIA... 23 He rejected the claim that the CPY was creating a one-party system, while at the same time he openly spoke that the old parties would not be restored. In 1946 he spoke only against a non-constructive opposition, while in 1947 he spoke against all opposition. At the Second Congress of the Popular Front (PF) of Yugoslavia in September 1947, Tito clearly rejected a multi-party structure.

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Revolutionary Totalitarianism, Pragmatic Socialism, Transition: Volume One, Tito's Yugoslavia, Stories Untold by Gorana Ognjenović, Jasna Jozelić


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