PART III: YUGOSLAVIA FROM A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE (1918–1991) - Yugoslavia on the International Scene: The active Coexistence of Non-Aligned Yugoslavia Cover Image

PART III: YUGOSLAVIA FROM A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE (1918–1991) - Yugoslavia on the International Scene: The active Coexistence of Non-Aligned Yugoslavia
PART III: YUGOSLAVIA FROM A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE (1918–1991) - Yugoslavia on the International Scene: The active Coexistence of Non-Aligned Yugoslavia

Author(s): Tvrtko Jakovina
Subject(s): Diplomatic history, Recent History (1900 till today)
Published by: Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava u Srbiji
Summary/Abstract: The foreign policy of Tito’s Yugoslavia was always unusually dynamic, conspicuous and creative. Even immediately after the Second World War, when diplomats were impregnated with revolutionary charge, while the ideologized interpretation of the world and its future, search for allies among ideologically like-minded people, and the belief in restructuring based on a Marxist vision of the world and relying on the Soviet Union, did not mean that the diplomacy of the new Yugoslavia was not active and dynamic from the very outset. It often remained proactive and dynamic, distinguishing itself from the diplomacies of similar communist countries.

  • Page Range: 461-514
  • Page Count: 54
  • Publication Year: 2017
  • Language: English
Toggle Accessibility Mode