Constitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states

"The Vidovdan" Constitution of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, rendered on 28 June 1921, one hundred years after its adoption, remains an unavoidable topic and an occasion for discussions about the reasons for the failure of the Yugoslav state. The unitarian-centralist system u...

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Autor principal: Milošević Srđan
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
SR
Publicado: Union University, Faculty of Law, Belgrade 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/7aa25b0a69414ea3a13c88e64304c153
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:7aa25b0a69414ea3a13c88e64304c1532021-12-05T21:29:41ZConstitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states2217-28152406-138710.5937/pravzap0-32156https://doaj.org/article/7aa25b0a69414ea3a13c88e64304c1532021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/2217-2815/2021/2217-28152101261M.pdfhttps://doaj.org/toc/2217-2815https://doaj.org/toc/2406-1387"The Vidovdan" Constitution of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, rendered on 28 June 1921, one hundred years after its adoption, remains an unavoidable topic and an occasion for discussions about the reasons for the failure of the Yugoslav state. The unitarian-centralist system unanimously criticized today as an inadequate constitutional form for the functioning of a complex community such as Yugoslavia was once legitimized by the concept of national unity of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. The national conception, the type of state system, and the related disagreements are part of both the political and constitutional history of the states that emerged from the disintegration of Yugoslavia. This paper analyses the content of textbooks of Constitutional Law that are in use at law schools in the successor states, which have existed continuously since the breakup of Yugoslavia until today and are used to educate the vast majority of lawyers in these states. The way in which the shared constitutional history from the first decade of Yugoslavia is presented after the collapse of the socialist paradigm (that mainly was unison) largely follows the national borders of the successor states in terms of its content and interpretation.Milošević SrđanUnion University, Faculty of Law, Belgrade articlekingdom of serbs, croats and slovenesthe "vidovdan" constitutionconstitutional lawtextbooksLawKENSRPravni Zapisi, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 261-284 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
SR
topic kingdom of serbs, croats and slovenes
the "vidovdan" constitution
constitutional law
textbooks
Law
K
spellingShingle kingdom of serbs, croats and slovenes
the "vidovdan" constitution
constitutional law
textbooks
Law
K
Milošević Srđan
Constitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states
description "The Vidovdan" Constitution of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, rendered on 28 June 1921, one hundred years after its adoption, remains an unavoidable topic and an occasion for discussions about the reasons for the failure of the Yugoslav state. The unitarian-centralist system unanimously criticized today as an inadequate constitutional form for the functioning of a complex community such as Yugoslavia was once legitimized by the concept of national unity of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. The national conception, the type of state system, and the related disagreements are part of both the political and constitutional history of the states that emerged from the disintegration of Yugoslavia. This paper analyses the content of textbooks of Constitutional Law that are in use at law schools in the successor states, which have existed continuously since the breakup of Yugoslavia until today and are used to educate the vast majority of lawyers in these states. The way in which the shared constitutional history from the first decade of Yugoslavia is presented after the collapse of the socialist paradigm (that mainly was unison) largely follows the national borders of the successor states in terms of its content and interpretation.
format article
author Milošević Srđan
author_facet Milošević Srđan
author_sort Milošević Srđan
title Constitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states
title_short Constitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states
title_full Constitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states
title_fullStr Constitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states
title_full_unstemmed Constitution without a state: The formation of The Kingdom of SCS and "The Vidovdan" Constitution in The constitutional law curriculum in Yugoslavia's successor states
title_sort constitution without a state: the formation of the kingdom of scs and "the vidovdan" constitution in the constitutional law curriculum in yugoslavia's successor states
publisher Union University, Faculty of Law, Belgrade
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/7aa25b0a69414ea3a13c88e64304c153
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