Yugoslavia:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Glossary
- Cetnik
(pl., Cetnici)
- Name
derived from the Serbian word for detachment; in full,
Detachments of the Yugoslav Army of the Fatherland. Given
to several Serbian resistance groups in World War II
organized to oppose occupying Nazis and Croatian
collaborators. Avoiding large- scale conflict with the
invaders, the Cetnici mostly fought the communist
Partisans (q.v.) of Josip Broz Tito. The most
important Cetnik group was in Serbia, led by Draza
Mihajlovic.
- collectivization
of agriculture
- The
process of imposing state control of agriculture by
forming privately held land into socially owned and
managed farms.
- Comecon
(Council for Mutual Economic Assistance)
- A
multilateral economic alliance headquartered in Moscow.
Members in 1990 included Bulgaria, Cuba, Czechoslovakia,
the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), Hungary,
Mongolia, Poland, Romania, the Soviet Union, and Vietnam.
Also referred to as CMEA or CEMA.
- Cominform
(Communist Information Bureau)
- An
international communist organization (1947-56) including
the communist parties of Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia,
France, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Romania, the Soviet
Union, and Yugoslavia (expelled in 1948). Formed on
Soviet initiative, it issued propaganda advocating
international communist solidarity as a tool of Soviet
foreign policy.
- Cyrillic
- Alphabet
ascribed to missionary Cyril (ninth century), developed
from Greek for church literature in Russian. Now the
alphabet of the Soviet republics, Serbia, and Bulgaria,
it is one of the three principal alphabets of the
world.
- dinar
- Yugoslav
national currency unit consisting of 100 paras. Devalued
frequently since 1980. In 1980 exchange rate was YD24.9
per US$1; in 1985, YD270.2 per US$1; and in 1988,
YD2,522.6 per US$1. In 1990 new "heavy" dinar was
established, worth 10,000 old dinars; 1990 exchange rate
was fixed at 7 dinars per West German deutsche mark. New
rate January 1991 was YD10.50 per US$1.
- Dual
Monarchy
- Popular
name for the Habsburg Empire after the 1867 Ausgleich
(Compromise) that united Austria and Hungary under a
common monarch; arranged to bolster the waning influence
of Austria in Europe. Also known as the Austro-Hungarian
Empire.
- EC
(European Community)
- A
group of three primarily economic communities of West
European countries, including the European Economic
Community (EEC- -q.v.), the European Atomic
Energy Community (Euratom or EAEC), and the European Coal
and Steel Community (ECSC). Executive power rested with
the European Commission, which implemented and defended
the community treaties in the interests of the EC as a
whole. Also known as the European
Communities.
- EEC
(European Economic Community)
- The
"Common Market" of primarily West European countries
organized to promote coordinated development of economic
activities, continuous and balanced expansion, increased
stability, and closer relations among member states.
Methods included elimination of customs duties and import
restrictions among member states and a common customs
tariff, a common commercial policy toward outside
countries, and a common agricultural and transport
policy.
- EFTA
(European Free Trade Association)
- Created
in 1960 to bring about free trade in industrial goods and
expansion of trade in agricultural goods among member
countries. In 1990 members included Austria, Finland,
Iceland, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland. The Joint
EFTA-Yugoslavia Committee was established in 1978 to
expand trade and industrial cooperation with
Yugoslavia.
- GATT
(General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade)
- An
integrated set of bilateral trade agreements among
nations, formed in 1947 to abolish quotas and reduce
tariffs. Yugoslavia became a member of GATT in 1965, when
its tariff and trade regulations were brought into line
with international practices.
- GDP
(gross domestic product)
- A
measure of the total value of goods and services produced
by a domestic economy during a given period, usually a
year. Obtained by adding the value of profits, employee
compensation, and depreciation of capital from each
sector of the economy.
- GMP
(gross material product)
- The
value added by the productive sectors before deduction of
depreciation. GMP excludes the value of services in the
nonproductive sectors such as defense, public
administration, finance, education, health, and housing.
Also known as social product.
- GNP
(gross national product)
- The
sum of the gross domestic product (GDP--q.v.)
and the income received from abroad by residents, minus
payments remitted abroad to nonresidents.
- Green
Plans
- A
series of federal government agricultural plans in
Yugoslavia for the period 1973 through 1985, aimed at
stimulating agricultural production. They provided for
large foreign and domestic investment in agriculture and
incentives for private agriculture.
- hard
currency
- Currency
freely convertible and traded on international currency
markets.
- Helsinki
Accords
- Signed
August 1975 by all European countries except Albania,
plus Canada and the United States, to endorse general
principles of international behavior, especially in
economic, environmental, and humanitarian issues.
Helsinki Accords is short form for the Final Act of the
Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe
(CSCE).
- IMF
(International Monetary Fund)
- Established
with the World Bank (q.v.) in 1945, a
specialized agency affiliated with the United Nations and
responsible for stabilizing international exchange rates
and payments. Its main business was providing loans to
its members when they experienced balance of payments
difficulties.
- LCY
(League of Communists of Yugoslavia)
- Until
1990 the sole political party of Yugoslavia. Each
republic and province had a separate organization, such
as the League of Communists of Macedonia. Until 1952
called the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (CPY). In 1990
the national organization split at the Fourteenth Party
Congress; some republic parties took different names,
e.g., the Serbian party changed its name from League of
Communists of Serbia to Socialist Party of Serbia. All
the republic communist parties remained intact (although
reduced in membership) and ran candidates in the
multiparty 1990 republic elections.
- market
socialism
- The
economic system introduced in 1963 in Yugoslavia based on
worker-managed enterprises, using domestic and foreign
market forces as a management guide.
- nation
and nationality
- Juridically
important distinctions that have played significant roles
in Yugoslav political life, in spite of legislation that
gave full equality to minorities in culture, public life,
and language. The term nation was used in
reference to ethnic groups whose traditional territorial
homelands lay mostly within the modern boundaries of
Yugoslavia, i.e., the Croats, Macedonians, Montenegrins,
Muslim Slavs, Serbs, and Slovenes. The term
nationality, or national minority,
designated groups in Yugoslavia whose homelands were
outside Yugoslavia; the largest of these were the
Hungarians and the Albanians.
- pan-Slavism
- A
nineteenth-century intellectual movement that sought to
unite the Slavic peoples of Europe based on their common
ethnic background, culture, and political
goals.
- Partisans
- Popular
name for resistance forces led by Josip Broz Tito during
World War II. In December 1941, adopted formal name
People's Liberation Army and Partisan
Detachments.
- Serbia
proper
- The
part of the Republic of Serbia not including the
provinces of Vojvodina and Kosovo; the ethnic and
political core of the Serbian state.
- social
product
- See
GMP (gross material product).
- social
sector
- The
sector of the Yugoslav economy in which assets were
socially owned and self-management governed economic
activity.
- Ustase
(sing., Ustasa)
- From
the word ustanak, meaning uprising or rebellion.
An extremist Croatian movement that began as an interwar
terrorist organization, then adopted fascist guidelines
and collaborated with German and Italian occupation
forces in World War II. The movement's genocidal
practices against Serbs, Muslims, and other minorities in
Croatia and Bosnia and Hercegovina caused animosities
that lasted long after the war.
- World
Bank
- Informal
name used to designate a group of three affiliated
international institutions: the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), providing loans to
developing countries; the International Development
Association (IDA), providing credits to the poorest
developing countries on easier terms than the IBRD; and
the International Finance Corporation (IFC),
supplementing IBRD activity by loans to stimulate private
enterprise in less developed countries. The three
institutions are owned by the governments of the
countries that subscribe their capital. To participate in
the World Bank group, member states must first belong to
the International Monetary Fund
(IMF--q.v.).
Yugoslavia:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Bibliography
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