The monograph analyses the position of Slovenians in the First Yugoslavia and the views of democracy in what was then the bourgeois camp. The bourgeois side rejected communism, fascism and Nazism; however, in the 1930s it supported the principle of authoritarian democracy or democracy disciplined by the state. The differences between the Catholic and liberal camp remained present in the form of the cultural struggle and in the autonomist or centralist attitudes to the national problem. In the First Yugoslavia Slovenians gained experience for new national and emancipation trials.
COBISS.SI-ID: 248631552
In the Marxist camp after World War I the polarisation between the social democratic and communist orientations occurred. Both of these argued for extensive social and political transformation, while according to their perceptions democracy had distinctively political and social implications. Social democrats supported reforms in the form of social changes in the context of the pluralist bourgeois democracy, while communists argued for the revolution and establishment of the monoparty power monopoly by the proletariat.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2668148
The monograph focuses on the development of education in Slovenia in the time of the Habsburg Monarchy and both Yugoslav states. It analyses the issue of the minor nation's language assertion (Slovenian) in the dominant educational system in which the language of the major nation was used, levels of gender equality in the school system, the increasing availability of education also for the lower strata of the population, the issues related to school reform planning and the role of expert institutions in this planning.
COBISS.SI-ID: 248250624
This monograph deals with the political developments and the conflict between the supporters of the pluralist and monoparty political concept in Zone A of Venezia Giulia in the period from the Yugoslav occupation on 1 May 1945 until the establishment of the provisions of the peace treaty with Italy on 15 September 1947.On the basis of social class reasons a part of the Italian Trieste supported the annexation to Yugoslavia, which was also supported by almost all coastal region (Primorska) Slovenians, who soon took different ideological and political sides with regard to the issue of democracy.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2697076
The discussion looks at the development of the socio cultural historical issues of World War II in Slovenia and their understanding in the time after the democratisation process in the end of the 1980s. The discussion establishes that this issue is still quite poorly represented in the Slovenian historical memory, due to different social priorities (the struggle for the political and ideological interpretation of this period) as well as because of the lack of systematic in depth research of this issue.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2666356