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Tom XXVI

2017 Next

Publication date: 31.01.2018

Licence: CC BY-NC-ND  licence icon

Editorial team

Issue content

I. TOŻSAMOŚĆ, HISTORIA, JĘZYK

Barbara Krauz-Mozer

Central European and Balkan Studies, Tom XXVI, 2017, pp. 11 - 21

https://doi.org/10.4467/2543733XSSB.17.019.8317
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Wiesław Walkiewicz

Central European and Balkan Studies, Tom XXVI, 2017, pp. 29 - 42

https://doi.org/10.4467/2543733XSSB.17.021.8319
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II. TOŻSAMOŚĆ NARODÓW I MNIEJSZOŚCI

Dušan T. Bataković

Central European and Balkan Studies, Tom XXVI, 2017, pp. 105 - 123

https://doi.org/10.4467/2543733XSSB.17.027.8325
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III. TOŻSAMOŚĆ I PROJEKTY CYWILIZACYJNE

Katerina Mladenovska-Ristovska

Central European and Balkan Studies, Tom XXVI, 2017, pp. 281 - 291

https://doi.org/10.4467/2543733XSSB.17.038.8336
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Słowa kluczowe: forms of identity, identity formed, identity unit, collective identity, discussions about identity, national identity, communication, interculture, Balkan, languages, lexicon, Macedonian language, Slavic and non-Slavic languages, Croatia, Croatian identity, history of Croatia, collective memory, symbols of Croatian history, Macedonian language, transmedia storytelling, narrative identity, Balkans, Macedonia, Serbo-Croatian language, Serbian language, Croatian language, Bosnian language, Balkan dialects, Russian Empire, Balkan states, Balkan nations, military expansion, economical expansion, Macedonian Jews, public space, symbolic representation identity, neo-Ottomanism, Islamic terrorism, Turkish policy, post-Yugoslavian countries, religious fundamentalism, the Balkans, economic influence, Islamization, Serbia, Kosovo, ethnic-strife, Albanians, Serbs, 1999 NATO intervention, international policy, ethnic discrimination, self-proclaimed independence, Serbia, Kosovo, national identity, ontological security, Nation-Building, State-Building, Norm-Promotion, International Norms, NGOs, ethnic identity, national identity, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Emir Kusturica, Miljenko Jergović, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Muslim identity, terrorism, international relations, Yugoslavia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, national minorities, ethnic minorities, Montenegro, elections, Albanians, Serbs, Bosnians, political parties, political activity, transgression, Gora, Goranie, Kosovo, ethnic identity, Ruthenians, Vojvodina, Serbia, national minorities., Pirin Macedonia, People’s Republic of Macedonia, Moscow, Beograd, Skopje, Sofia, national-cultural autonomy in the Pirin Region, national census in Pirin, Macedonia in December 1946, Turkish minority, MRF, Movements for Rights and Freedoms, ethnic party, liberal party, relevance of parties, minor parties., ancient Macedonians, pro-Greek policy, Alexander I Philhellene, Archelaus, presidency, postcommunist states, desintegration of Yugoslavia, democratization, authoritarian, Serbia and Montenegro, Serbia, Montenegro, politic transformations in the Balkans, the Balkans