The discussion focuses on the attitude of the CPS to the issue of the city of Trieste during WW II. While shaping their viewpoint of this issue, the communists went through several stages, before reaching a decision-on the basis of various political factors-that the city of Trieste also belonged to the United Slovenia. Such a decision was reached by the Slovenian communists because of national as well as ideological reasons. The result of these decisions was the interwar and post-war struggle for the Western border, which also encompassed the demand for the annexation of Trieste.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2372212
The ideological basis which led to the establishment of the Yugoslav state was represented by so-called Yugoslav thought. This article follows the development of this thought, reflected in the programmes for the state-political union of the Southern Slavic nations. Two concepts - unitarian and federalist - met at this point. Initially the first concept was more prominent, and this was reflected in the system of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Then the federalist principle gained prominence in the bourgeois camp, and later - after the initial indifference - also in the Marxist camp.
COBISS.SI-ID: 941445
In 1944, CPS already controlled the whole partisan movement and was systematically getting ready for the revolutionary takeover of power after the war. Because of tactical reasons it did not talk about revolution and outwardly it persisted in its "national liberation positions". At the same time it strengthened its own ranks and established the revolutionary orientation of its authority through its monopoly role. It introduced the revolutionary legal order and judicial power, prepared the administrative apparatus and the plans for the measures after the takeover of power.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2464372
The discussion analyses the main emphases with regard to the issue of the use of violence by the Slovenian partisan movement and its communist leadership. This violence is presented from the viewpoint of the assessments of its Slovenian opponents, that is, various anti-revolutionary subjects. The main source of the aforementioned viewpoints is represented by the anti-communist illegal press and the reports to the government-in-exile. In the spring of 1942 these subjects, except for the group called "Straža" (Guard), have not yet considered organising an armed resistance to this violence.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2699380
The monograph recounts an analysis of the basic orientation, activities and internal development of the CPS in the years 1941-1943. It focuses on one of the key periods of the historical development of the CPS, when it assessed that it would be possible to carry out a revolutionary project during the occupation and thus became an increasingly important political factor in the Slovenian society. The monograph also focuses on the decisive role of communists in leading the resistance; the organisational issue as the preliminary condition for the realisation of the revolution.
COBISS.SI-ID: 236870656