The social history of the province of Serbia
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- In Yugoslavia, Rising Ethnic Strife Brings
Fears of Worse Civil Conflict
- By David Binder, The New York Times, Sunday
November 1 1987. Portions of southern Yugoslavia have
reached such a state of ethnic friction that Yugoslavs have
begun to talk of the horrifying possibility of “civil
war”. The current hostilities pit separatist-minded
ethnic Albanians against the various Slavic populations of
Yugoslavia and occur at all levels of society.
- Birth, nationalism and war
- By Stasa Zajovic, Women in Black, 13 January 1995. In the
late eighties, with the consolidation of nationalism as
the state ideology in Serbia, the propaganda directed
against women grew stronger. In early 1990, demographers and
physicians, supported by the mass media and institutions,
offered legal proposals concerning women, some of which
were cynical and underestimated women.
- Romanies in Serbia: Life on the margins of
society
- By Olga Nikolic, AIM, Belgrade, 29 February
2001. Belgrade is confronted with racist hatred directed
at its Romany fellow-citizens. Only this time, Jews have
been added to the list.