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         Yugoslavia Culture:     more books (35)
  1. Beyond Yugoslavia: Politics, Economics, and Culture in a Shattered Community (Eastern Europe After Communism) by Sabrina P. Ramet, 1995-05
  2. Balkan Babel: Politics, Culture, and Religion in Yugoslavia by Sabrina Petra Ramet, 1992-03
  3. IVth International Symposium on Apricots and Apricot Culture, Subotica, Yugoslavia 8-13 July 1968. by International Society for Horticultural Science., 1968
  4. Selevac: A Neolithic Village in Yugoslavia (Monumenta Archaeologica (Univ of Calif-La, Inst of Archaeology)) by Ruth Tringham, 1990-12
  5. Education and culture of nationalities in Yugoslavia (Studies, no. 4) by Gabor Janosi, 1965
  6. Balkan Babel: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia from the Death of Tito to Ethnic War by Sabrina P. Ramet, 1996-02
  7. Peasant culture and urbanization in Yugoslavia by Joel Martin Halpern, 1964
  8. Politics and culture in Yugoslavia (Politics and culture series) by William Zimmerman, 1987
  9. Cultural policy in Yugoslavia: Self-management and culture (Studies and documents on cultural policies) by Stevan Majstorovic, 1980
  10. Culture and art activities of trade unions of Yugoslavia by Mirko Milojković, 1950
  11. Cherishing of national creation in Yugoslavia and possibilities of cooperation and extending help to the emigrants in preserving and furthering their ethnic culture by Srebrica Knežević, 1977
  12. A system of oyster culture on floating shellfish parks (Studies and reviews / General Fisheries Council for the Mediterranean) by M Nikolić, 1962
  13. The signs of Vinca culture;: An internal analysis: their role, chronology and independence from Mesopotamia by Milton McChesney Winn, 1973
  14. Language, ethnicity, and nationalism: On the linguistic foundations of a unified Yugoslavia by Henrik Birnbaum, 1978

61. Reports On War Crimes In The FormerYugoslavia
13) Indictments/International Criminal Tribunal on the Former yugoslavia (ICTY Economist,on misrepresentations of Bosnia; 17) History, culture, and Destruction
http://www.haverford.edu/relg/sells/reports.html
Alert, May 2004: Ongoing Genocide in Western Sudan
Sean O'Fahey's Report: A Distant Genocide in Darfur, 8 May 2004
Nicholas Kristoff, New York Times Column of 29 May 2004
Human Rights Archives on the Genocide in Bosnia
(and attempted genocide in Kosovo)
Supplementary Documentation for Michael A. Sells,
The Bridge Betrayed: Religion and Genocide in Bosnia
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996)
New Ed. with Preface on Kosovo (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1998)
1996. ISBN 0-520-20690-8 (Cloth) $19.95; ISBN 0-520-21662-8 (Paper, 1998 Edition) $14.95. Order Info: 609-883-1759
Bosnian Lanugage Edition: Iznevjerni Most , translated by Zoran Mutic (Sarajevo: Sedam Press, 2002)
1997 American Academy Religion Award, Excellence in Historical Studies
Table of Contents and Books Reviews for The Bridge Betrayed
Correction
New, February 04: Brdjanin genocide trial sees witness recant Deichmann-Trnopolje hoax, along with a call to indict clerics who incite genocide . Also, Diego Enrique Arria on the UN, Milosevic, and slow motion genocide;

62. Wauu.DE: Regional: Europe: Yugoslavia: Society And Culture
War in yugoslavia By Donna Hughes, Feminista! vol 3, no 1. http//www.feminista.com/v3n1/hughes.html.Yugoslav Commission for UNESCO List of cultural heritage
http://www.wauu.de/Regional/Europe/Yugoslavia/Society_and_Culture/
Home Regional Europe Yugoslavia : Society and Culture Search DMOZ-Verzeichnis:
All Categories Categories Onlye
Kategorien:
Chat Law Organizations Personal Homepages ... Politics
Links:
  • Astrocartography of Yugoslavia
    Based on the proclamation of The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 27 April 1992. From "Transcendental Nations": Charts of nations and mundane events, by Robert Couteau.
    http://members.tripod.com/tra_nations/a_yugoslavia_acg.htm
  • Children
    Dedicated to the children affected by the NATO aggression on the FRY.
    http://www.children.org.yu/english/index.html
  • Ethnologue guide to Yugoslavia
    Part of Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 13th Edition; Barbara F. Grimes, Editor; Summer Institute of Linguistics, 1996.
    http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=Yugoslavia
  • Jurist World Law: Yugoslavia Special reports from correspondents and directory of information on all aspects of law in Yugoslavia. From Jurist: the Legal Education Network at University of Pittsburgh. http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/world/yugo.htm
  • The Braindrain Project Maintaining communication between young professionals who have left Yugoslavia in the past ten years and their colleagues in the country.

63. POLAND.COM - Travel - Hotels - Flights - Tickets - Business - Culture - Your Gat
POLAND.COM Travel - Hotels - Flights - Tickets - Business - culture - Your Gatewayto Poland! Forum Index Religion Monastery in Montenegro, yugoslavia.
http://www.poland.com/modules.php?op=modload&name=Forum&file=viewtopic&topic=89&

64. Indiana University Bloomington Libraries Green Box Reference Sources: Yugoslavia
a Country Study, D101.22 55099/992 (SuDocs reference) yugoslavia a Country Policies,HB849.1.P67 (LC reference) Census 2002 culture/Cultural Policy World
http://www.indiana.edu/~libgpd/guides/green/yugoslavia.html
Serbia and Montenegro
Map of Serbia-Montenegro
General Information Sources in GIMSS
The Europa World Year Book , JN1.E89 (GIMSS reference desk)
The Statesman's Year-Book , AY754.S7 (GIMSS reference desk)
The World Factbook , PrEx3.15: (GIMSS reference desk)
The World Factbook
World Development Indicators , HC59.69.W68 (GIMSS reference desk)
World Development Indicators , HC59.69.W682 (high-use CD-Roms; inquire at desk)
WDI Online [see Library's Find Information page; available to authorized IUB users only]
Statistical Yearbook on Candidate and South-East European Countries , HC244.A1 S738 [from the EU] (LC stacks)
Nations of the World [from the Law Library of Congress; links to many types of resources, with an emphasis on law and government]
Background Information on Countries of the World
Country Information [from the State Dept. Bureau of European Affairs]
Portals to the World [from LC]
Yugoslavia: a Country Study , D101.22: 550-99/992 (SuDocs reference)
Yugoslavia: a Country Study
Census/Population
International Data Base (IDB) (population statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau)
National Population Policies , HB849.1.P67 (LC reference)

65. Newsgroup FAQ's: Soc.culture.yugoslavia
Newsgroup FAQ s soc.culture.yugoslavia. British exEmpire can t evenafford decent boots (Jan 16 2003, 4Kb) Re Why did the Asians
http://www.newsville.com/cgi-bin/getfaq?soc.culture.yugoslavia

66. Serbia Info News / Culture & Religion
Europe and Serbian culture Minister Branislav Lecic in Belgrade and Arandjelovacare just the beginning of a longlasting cooperation of yugoslavia with this
http://www.serbia-info.com/news/culture/
www.serbia-info.com/news September 13, 2001 - 15:55 CET CIVIL ISSUES POLITICS MILITARY KOSOVO AND METOHIA ... ECONOMY CULTURE AND RELIGION SPORT Twentieth Century - Innovations in Belgrade Milena Pavlovic Barili - A poet of painting
Vuk represents the strength of our rebirth

Serbian Culture Minister Branislav Lecic opened the 67th Vuk's Assembly in Trsic, the oldest and most important traditional Serbian gathering READ MORE
Vuk Karadzic This year's, 67th annual Vuk's Assembly begins in Loznica on Monday, September 10, and will close on September 16, with a final performance at this, the oldest traditional Serbian gathering MORE The International Slavistic Centre at the Faculty of Philology, Belgrade University, will organize the 31st International Conference of Slavists from September 1 to 21 in Belgrade, Novi Sad and Trsic MORE The 41st Dragacevo assembly of trumpet players in Guca, attended by about 150,000 visitors and fans of authentic Serbian national music, concluded on August 26 MORE La MaMa Experimental Theatre from New York stages "Seven Against Thebes" in the Belgrade National Theatre MORE On the big summer scene in Palic, presentation of the awards marked Eighth International Film Festival Palic 2001 closed

67. Yugoslavia The Slovenes - Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Reso
began a heated debate on the implications of unification for Slovenian culture.Data as of December 1990. NOTE The information regarding yugoslavia on this
http://www.workmall.com/wfb2001/yugoslavia/yugoslavia_history_the_slovenes.html

  • HISTORY INDEX
  • Country Ranks
    Yugoslavia
    The Slovenes
    http://workmall.com/wfb2001/yugoslavia/yugoslavia_history_the_slovenes.html
    Source: The Library of Congress Country Studies
      < BACK TO HISTORY CONTENTS The Slovenes, a Slavic people, migrated southwestward across present-day Romania in about the sixth century A.D., and settled in the Julian Alps. They apparently enjoyed broad autonomy in the seventh century, after escaping Avar domination. The Franks overran the Slovenes in the late eighth century; during the rule of the Frankish king Charlemagne, German nobles began enserfing the Slovenes and German missionaries baptized them in the Latin rite. Emperor Otto I incorporated most of the Slovenian lands into the duchy of Carantania in 952; later rulers split the duchy into Carinthia, Carniola, and Styria (see fig. 2). In 1278 the Slovenian lands fell to the Austrian Habsburgs, who controlled them until 1918. Turkish marauders plagued Carinthia, Carniola, and Styria in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The Slovenes abandoned lands vulnerable to attack and raised bulwarks around churches to protect themselves. The Turkish conquest of the Balkans and Hungary also disrupted the Slovenian economy; to compensate, the nobles stiffened feudal obligations and crushed peasant revolts between 1478 and 1573. In the tumult of the sixteenth century, German nobles in the three Slovenian provinces clamored for greater autonomy, embraced the Protestant Reformation, and drew many Slovenes away from the Catholic Church. The Reformation sparked the Slovenes' first cultural awakening. In 1550 Primoz Trubar published the first Slovenian-language book, a catechism. He later produced a translation of the New Testament and printed other Slovenian religious books in the Latin and
  • 68. News From The Former Yugoslavia
    Palme Award was shared by three journalists from the former yugoslavia. organizedby ATTACK autonomous culture factory participants green action zagreb, dj
    http://flag.blackened.net/agony/yugo.html
    News from the former Yugoslavia
    Ongoing Story: Stop the War in Kosovo! Latest News: Reactions to the NATO Bombing by Yugoslav Anarchists (Mar) Ex-Yugoslav Journalists win International Award (Feb) News Archive: Reclaiming the Streets in Zagreb (98) Zagreb Social Center attacked by Skinheads (98) Attack: New Social Space in Zagreb (98) Eco-Anarchists in Slovenia opens Info-Shop (98) ... Yugo Peace Opposition goes Cyber (95) ZAGINFLATCH Newsletter: #1 Sep 94 #2 Oct 94 #6 Aug 95 #8 Jun 96 ... #15 > Mar/Apr 99 Zagreb anarchists now have a webpage at http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Senate/3707
    Ex-Yugoslav Journalists win International Award
    February 99: This year's Olof Palme Award was shared by three journalists from the former Yugoslavia. Viktor Ivancic from the Croat satirical paper Feral Tribune, Senad Pecanin from the Bosnian magazine Dani, and Veran Matic from the independent radio network Anem in Serbia were given the award for maintaining professional quality in their work in spite of threats and harassment. With its satirical and pornographic covers and its investigative journalism, Feral Tribune have brought on the wrath of the Croatian president Franjo Tudjman, whose party HDZ has a near monopoly of newspapers, radio and television. Just now, there are over 600 ongoing judicial proceedings against journalists in Croatia, said Ivancic. The secret police have established dossiers about journalists, and the regime denounces dissidents as enemies and traitors. Recently, the European Council published a rapport accusing Croatia of continuing to curb the freedom of the press and the rights of minorities.

    69. SEEING YUGOSLAVIA THROUGH A DARK GLASS
    Indeed, the sanctions against yugoslavia covered culture and sports, thus eliminatingfor several crucial years any opportunity for Serbian Yugoslavs to take
    http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/grattan_healy/johnston.htm
    Seeing Yugoslavia Through a Dark Glass
    Politics, Media and the Ideology of Globalization

    by Diana Johnstone

    10 August 1998
    from
    COVERT ACTION QUARTERLY

    No 65, Fall 1998
    Years of experience in and out of both mainstream and alternative media have made me aware of the power of the dominant ideology to impose certain interpretations on international news. During the Cold War, most world news for American consumption had to be framed as part of the Soviet-U.S. contest. Since then, a new ideological bias frames the news. The way the violent fragmentation of Yugoslavia has been reported is the most stunning example.
    I must admit that it took me some time to figure this out, even though I had a long-standing interest and some knowledge of Yugoslavia. I spent time there as a student in 1953, living in a Belgrade dormitory and learning the language. In 1984, in a piece for In These Times I warned that extreme decentralization, conflicting economic interests between the richer and poorer regions, austerity policies imposed by the IMF and the decline of universal ideals were threatening Yugoslavia with "re-Balkanization" in the wake of Tito's death and desanctification. "Local ethnic interests are reasserting themselves", I wrote. "The danger is that these rival local interests may become involved in the rivalries of outside powers. This is how the Balkans in the past were a powder keg of world war." Writing this took no special clairvoyance. The danger of Yugoslavia's disintegration was quite obvious to all serious observers well before Slobodan Milosevic arrived on the scene.

    70. YuSearch.com
    ART culture TOP 44, http//www.topart.cjb.net Prva top lista sajtova Also shortportraits of most famous Montenegrin artists; art news from yugoslavia;
    http://www.yusearch.com/start/index/?category=e1&language=english

    71. Regional Links
    Archives of yugoslavia (In English and Serbian); Biblioteka Grada Beograda (In Historyof Serbian culture Literature (In English); Recent Books on Serbian
    http://www.wisc.edu/creeca/links/serbia.html
    Serbia and Montenegro
    (Republic of Former Yugoslavia)
    General Sites Ethnography Maps Culture ... Literature General Sites back to top Culture

    72. Central Europe Review - Caught In The Middle
    Rusyn culture in yugoslavia. For all of the success the Rusyns have had in preservingtheir culture in yugoslavia, there is much cause for concern.
    http://www.ce-review.org/00/25/pozun25.html
    Vol 2, No 25
    26 June 2000 CER INFO
    front page

    overview

    sponsor us

    advertising
    ...
    e-mail us
    ARCHIVES
    year 2000

    year 1999

    by subject

    by author
    ... search MORE bookshop music shop video store conferences ... links Rusyn-language school in Ruski Kerestur Caught in the Middle Carpatho-Rusyns and the Vojvodina Brian J Požun The vocal Albanian minority in Kosovo and Metohija and the Hungarian minority in the Vojvodina are not the only national minorities in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The Carpatho-Rusyns, or Ruthenians, are one of the smaller, lesser-known and more successful national minorities living in Yugoslavia today. But what will happen to them if the Vojvodina really is to be the next Kosovo? The Carpatho-Rusyns (also called Ruthenians) are a small Slavic group of just under two million who live primarily in Ukraine, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary and Romania, as well as in diaspora in Yugoslavia, the Czech Republic, the United States and elsewhere. They speak a range of dialects and standardized languages that are officially classified as East Slavic and are written using the Cyrillic alphabet. Most belong to the Greek Catholic Church, but the Orthodox Church also has strong support among the group. Some 250 years ago, Rusyns began migrating south from their homeland in the Carpathian mountains to the Srem and Bačka regions of what is now the Vojvodina in Yugoslavia and Eastern Slavonia in Croatia. At the time, the Carpathian region along with the Srem and Bačka regions were all parts of the Kingdom of Hungary. The first major Rusyn settlement in this region was in Ruski Kerestur (in Serbian, Ruski Krstur), to this day inhabited almost exclusively by Rusyns.

    73. Worldwide Classroom: Yugoslavia Schools
    Serbian Language and culture Valjevo yugoslavia. Mailing Information. Contact Information.School Name Serbian Language and culture. Attention Predrag Obucina.
    http://www.worldwide.edu/ci/yugoslavia/schools/36546.html
    Serbian Language and Culture
    Valjevo - Yugoslavia
    Mailing Information Contact Information School Name: Serbian Language and Culture Attention: Predrag Obucina Address: Oslobodioci Valjeva 31/7 City: Valjevo State/Prov: Serbia Postal Code: Country: Yugoslavia Tel: Additional Information Program Information: Type of Institution
    • Career, Technical or Professional
    • Fieldwork or Study-tour (no classroom environment)
    Programs are for
    • University Students
    • Business and Professionals (post univ.)
    • Mature Adults (50+)
    You Teach/Offer
    • Language Classes for Foreigners
    • Courses in Humanities and/or Liberal Art
    • Courses in the Arts including fine, applied and/or performing
    • Hobby courses including crafts and/or photography
    • Courses in tourism, hotel/restaurant management and/or cooking
    • Courses in Ecology, Nature and/or Wildlife
    • Classroom setting also includes field-trips
    Worldwide Classroom
    Box 1166 - Milwaukee, WI 53201-1166, USA
    FAX: (414) 224-3466 E-Mail: Contacting Worldwide Classroom

    74. War In Yugoslavia And The Right To The City
    of the civil war in yugoslavia its cities were attacked and destroyed because theyembodied the pluralist, cosmopolitan, inclusive culture that ridiculed the
    http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/envjust/papers/allpapers/radovic/home.htm
    Paper title: War in Yugoslavia and the Right to the City Theme: Environmental Justice, Cities and Planning Author: Dr. Darko Radovic
    University of Melbourne, Australia Email address: d.radovic@architecture.unimelb.edu.au
    War in Yugoslavia and the Right to the City Dr Darko Radovic
    The University of Melbourne Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning Parkville 3052, Victoria, Australia phone (+61 3) 9344 6429 fax (+61 3) 9344 5532 e-mail: d.radovic@architecture.unimelb.edu.au "From the city born in the sign of the bridge, its first and its last word were torn out; I am afraid that is its death." Bogdan Bogdanovic, the architect of the Mostar War Memorial responding to the news on destruction of the Old Bridge in Mostar, Frankfurt, 12.11.1993 ABSTRACT The important aspect of the war in former Yugoslavia was the barbarian treatment of cities. Even in years before the war, the cities and urban life were in the focus of Yugoslav nationalisms. Eventually, with the outbreak of the war, they were attacked and destroyed because they were cities

    75. Crimes Against Culture
    In the former yugoslavia, the destruction of cultural heritage erased a common identityin cities and fulfilled an archaic dream in the countryside In 1991, in
    http://www.unesco.org/courier/2000_09/uk/signe2.htm

    Kosovo: burned books and blasted shrines
    The Mostar Bridge:
    rebirth of an emblem
    CRIMES AGAINST CULTURE
    Colin Kaiser, cultural heritage expert, former director of the UNESCO office in Sarajevo.
    A church destroyed in Croatia during fighting around Lipik.
    The Mostar Bridge: rebirth of an emblem It took no more than 30 minutes for Stari Most (“The Old Bridge”), the emblematic symbol of Mostar’s multicultural past, to be destroyed by bombardment from a Croatian army tank on November 9, 1993. Completed in 1566 after nine years of work, the bridge, designed by the Ottoman architect Mimar Hayruddin, once rose high above the emerald waters of the Neretva, connecting its east and west banks.
    The 29-metre-long stone arch bridge, a World Heritage site, gave the town its name and stimulated its blossoming from a tiny medieval settlement to a thriving trading centre that attracted merchants and travellers from across the region. This is where local couples romanced and young men dove into the river below in a famed annual contest. At the outbreak of the war, inhabitants cushioned the bridge with car tyres in an attempt to protect the structure. It was first damaged in 1992 by Yugoslav Army shelling.
    And Mostarians are already preparing to see their city’s emblem resurrected. More precisely, the party begins on September 15, 2004 at 5 p.m., a date chosen in the midst of the war by Mostarian architects whose life work is now dedicated to rebuilding their town.

    76. Demystifying Nationalism Dubravka Ugresic And The Situation Of
    of the Writer in (Ex) yugoslavia by Tatjana Pavlovic Romance Languages DeparmentUniversity of Washington pavlovic@u.washington.edu Postmodern culture v.5 n.3
    http://www.iath.virginia.edu/pmc/text-only/issue.595/review-1.595

    77. Wired News Radio Free Yugoslavia
    Advertisement. Radio Free yugoslavia. Amsterdam media critic Geert Lovinksaid, Civil society in yugoslavia and its media have been crushed.
    http://www.wired.com/news/news/culture/story/19715.html

    78. Serbia And Montenegro Links
    International Criminal Tribunal for the Former yugoslavia, The UN s page for war MontenegrinAssociation of America, Discusses history, culture and other topics.
    http://www.ku.edu/~herron/yugoslavia.htm
    Serbia and Montenegro = Albanian = English = French = German = Hungarian = Italian
    = Serbian
    Categories Daily Regional News News Source Beograd.co.yu Language : SR Legalizacija bespravno izgraðenih objekata
    Poziv za predlaganje projekata iz oblasti kulture za 2004.

    Nacrt Generalnog plana Beograda 2021

    Prikljuèenje 21.000 stanova na toplovod

    Central Government, Ministries and Agencies
    Links related to governmental structure, actions and policies. Federal Government Site Abstract Languages Government News and press releases from the federal government. Includes information on government institutions. Federal Ministries and Agencies Site Abstract Languages Archives Covers holdings and policies. Army Details structure, presents photos and news. Embassy in the US News and consular information. Site appears to be on a transition phase. Federal Bureau of Informatics News about databases and IT legislation. Federal Customs Service Describes the organization's responsibilities. English version is under construction.

    79. ★ Reviews Of Books About Yugoslavia
    But the key flaw in this book is that it is yet another analysis based on a mastervariable theory of yugoslavia s collapse, ie culture, says Wachtel, is the
    http://yugoslavia.vacationbookreview.com/yugoslavia_24.html
    Related Vacation Book Subjects: VacationBookReview yemen zambia Kosovo ... Serbia
    More Pages: yugoslavia Page 1 Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "yugoslavia" , sorted by average review score: The Fall of Yugoslavia: Why Communism Failed Published in Hardcover by Prometheus Books (June, 1997) Author: Svetozar Stojanovic Average review score: Fall of Yugoslavia The author, a professor from Serbia, analyzes his experiences as a dissident against the former Communist government of Yugoslavia, and the government of Slobodan Milosevic, emphasizing the required nationalism of any viable opposition, and attempting to rehabilitate his academic colleague Dobrica Cosic as well as other associates. At the same time, the author thoroughly and convincingly condemns exclusionary and militaristic nationalism, as obsolete and mortally dangerous to mankind. Not a narrative of the disintegration of Yugoslavia, this book instead illustrates dilemmas facing Western-democratically inclined intellectuals in Serbia. In the Wake of the Balkan Myth: Questions of Identity and Modernity Published in Hardcover by Palgrave Macmillan (November, 1999)

    80. ACCESS: Participants: Pro Et Contra (Center For Globalisation), Belgrade, Yugosl
    of ethnic identities and interethnic relations in yugoslavia/Serbia orientationsin contemporary Serbia (1998); comparative study of culture, religion and
    http://www.iwm.at/access/team-yu.htm

    Access

    Project

    Participants

    Papers
    ...
    Links
    Participants Pro et Contra (Center for Globalisation)
    Belgrade, Yugoslavia Pro et Contra, which legally is an NGO, was organised by professors teaching at different departments of the Faculty of Philosophy, Belgrade University in 2002, in order to enhance multidisciplinary research of contemporary social change in the country and at the international level. Its staff consists of 10 senior and 5 junior researchers, together with some 20 associated researchers (including PhD students, MA students and graduate students). The Center has established a permanent partnership with the Department of Sociology, Faculty of Philosophy, Belgrade University. The composition of researchers in the Center (and those engaged in the Project) is multidisciplinary - it includes economic sociologists, urban sociologists, economists, social anthropologists, ethnologists, social historians, etc. Some of them have already engaged in projects with researchers from other countries which are included into the current project ( Blue Bird. Agenda for Civil Society in South-East Europe).

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