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JOSIP BROZ TITO (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   149625


Josip Broz Tito and Yugoslav communism: a review of the work of Geoffrey Swain / Carmichael, Cathie   Journal Article
Carmichael, Cathie Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Many writers before and after 1980 have pondered Tito’s historical significance. What kind of Communist was he? He crafted an image of an alternative kind of socialism in which workers were self-managed and had high standards of living. Tito courted the leaders of developing countries through the Non-Aligned Movement and in this role was eventually respected by the Soviet leadership (at least after 1955) and by the West. Kim Il-sung, Leonid Brezhnev, Helmut Schmidt, Yasser Arafat and a host of other prominent world leaders attended his state funeral in 1980 in an apparently rare moment of unanimous reverence for his role in World War II.
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2
ID:   098358


Twilight of the revolutionaries: Nasi Spanci and the end of Yugoslavia / Pavlakovic, Vjeran   Journal Article
Pavlakovic, Vjeran Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract In the decade following the death of Josip Broz Tito in May 1980, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Socijalisticka Federativna Republika Jugoslavije, SFRJ) experienced increasingly catastrophic political, social and economic crises that contributed to the country's eventual disintegration and bloody ethno-national conflict in the 1990s. Attempts at reforming the decaying Titoist system, presided over by the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (Savez komunista Jugoslavije, SKJ),1 were ultimately undermined by the rise of nationalism in Serbia under Slobodan Milosevic after 1986 and the subsequent nationalist reactions in the other Yugoslav republics (Ramet 2005, pp. 54-75).
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