This article outlines the processes of reintegration of former Yugoslavia into the world capitalist system and reestablishment of capitalism in its former federal republics, particularly in Slovenia. Continue reading →
-
Recent Posts
- Post(pandemic) struggles in social reproduction: Romanian live-in care workers in Austria: exploitation and self-organization
- First as tragedy, then as farce? AUR and the long shadow of fascism in Romania
- Some Thoughts on the Failure of the National Strike in Belarus
- (Post)pandemic struggles in social reproduction: “Manage somehow”: notes from Ukraine on care labor at a time of local and global crisis
- Fascists in the House: What Can We Make of Far Right Success and Low Turn Out in Romania’s Latest Elections?
Google Analytics Stats
generated by GADWPInsert >>
Antifascism Is Not a Monument
The Sutjeska and Bijeljina monuments appear to stand for two profoundly divergent worlds, one symbolizing the cosmopolitan and antifascist past of socialist Yugoslavia, the other embodying the hyper-nationalist and segregationist present of post-Yugoslav states. Yet both monuments were made by the same sculptor. A ..