Abstract

Two Problems of Jugoslavia

Savich, Vladislav R. | February 8, 1919 issue

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Austria-Hungary has ceased to exist. The Jugoslavs are free. At last they have an opportunity which for centuries was denied to them of expressing themselves freely on all matters concerning their future national life. Two main questions are likely to absorb at the outset the attention of Jugoslavia, namely, the problem of the national union of all the Jugoslavs, Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, and the form of the future government. The first problem is the more important, since the form of government will depend very much on the way in which the problem of national unity is solved.

See Also:

YUGOSLAVIA -- Politics & government; NATION-building; YUGOSLAVIA -- Social conditions; NATIONALISM; INTERNATIONAL conflict; YUGOSLAVIA
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