Introduction: Talking Past Each Other and Other Catch-22 Situations: States, Emigration, and “Diasporas”

Neither migrants nor minorities always behave the way their governments want them to. This reality is a lesson that Yugoslavia, in both its embodiments, frequently made—amplified by the fact that both the interwar kingdom and the post-war communist regime pursued ambitious nation-building projects....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ulf Brunnbauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ZRC SAZU, Založba ZRC 2022-06-01
Series:Dve Domovini
Online Access:https://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/twohomelands/article/view/10561
Description
Summary:Neither migrants nor minorities always behave the way their governments want them to. This reality is a lesson that Yugoslavia, in both its embodiments, frequently made—amplified by the fact that both the interwar kingdom and the post-war communist regime pursued ambitious nation-building projects. These projects addressed not only the domestic population but also emigrants coming from its territory. In a region where minority issues and migration intersected in complex ways, such projects could go only wrong, one might have predicted. And they often did when policymakers and local bureaucrats struggled with inherently contradictory agendas.
ISSN:0353-6777
1581-1212