The chapter in the monograph paper addresses the diplomatic negotiations between Austria-Hungary and the Kingdom of Italy between July 1914 and May 1915. The negotiations under consideration constituted a basis for understanding the entry of the Kingdom of Italy into the first world war and the beginning of the refugee experience of the Slovenian population in the Isonzo region.
COBISS.SI-ID: 45355309
The chapter of the scientific monograph represents the first and decisive stage in the process of refugee civil society in the region of Posolini, Goriška and Crassus. It analyses the Austro-Hungarian evacuation plans and their actual implementation, which was disorganised, chaotic and delayed. At the same time, it presents social, national and confessional criteria for the accommodation of the refugee population, the transport to the investigation stations, especially in Lebnitz, in Styria and the installation procedures. It emphasises all the complexity of the initial phase of the refugee crisis, noting the complete lack of coordinated action between military and civilian authorities.
COBISS.SI-ID: 51388419
The monograph chapter deals with the process of returning the Slovenian refugees from refugee camps and colonies and from refugee camps in Italy, which depended on the dynamics of the reconstruction of the devastated region of Goriška - Province of Burgenland. The reversion of return is based on war developments. The chapter deals with the functioning of the various recovery and return committees and the role of Andrej Gabršček in this process. In the final part, it presents the process of returning refugees from refugee camps to the last refugee camp in Yugoslav Slovenia, i.e. Strnišče pri Ptuju.
COBISS.SI-ID: 44794669
The present study is intended to display the American role in assuring supplies to the Hungarian refugees in Yugoslavia after the 1956 revolution, in cooperation with the international humanitarian organizations, particularly the League of Red Cross Societies, and the Yugoslav government. Simultaneously, the article moderately presents the Yugoslav role in the revolution. Illustrating the coordination of supplies, the study thoroughly focuses on the causes and reasons of this complex cooperation at the height of the Cold War, which is particularly evident in the interstate relations amongst Yugoslavia and Hungary, Yugoslavia and the USA, and the wider part of the East and West ideological bloc. The first part of this research is primarily based on the use of literature, while the second part is based on the systematic study of archival sources of the American provenance.
COBISS.SI-ID: 66259042
he article presents the situation in Carinthia in the first months after the plebiscite, which ended on October 10, 1920, with the Austrian victory and the Yugoslav defeat. The author focuses its main attention on the presentation of the revan policy of the corrosion government circles and the prosecution of the Slovenians. The article is based on archives, publicity and memoirs, and it is also considered relevant Literature. The German nationalist leaders spoke officially of the reconciliation, their actions proved just opposite: they were in sign of the retaliation. Their manifestations full of humiliating political messages which included very often the calls for expulsion of those who had voted against the "freedom and indivisibility" of Carinthia at the plebiscite. Therefore, many of the Carinthian Slovenes were faced with a number of assaults on their properties. The most tragic were attacks of the German nationalists on the farms of the alleged pro-Yugoslav owners which resulted in many cases in burning-down of the Slovene-owned houses and stables. In the first months after the plebiscite, there were many cases when the personal safety of the Slovenes was at stake, since the triumphant side accused them of pro- Yugoslav feelings. Some of those cases were published in the Slovene newspapers, reporting that even the lives of the Slovenes were in danger. Mostly, the Carinthian police was not ready to intervene, although it was informed and asked for help. The main target of the winning side was the Slovene intelligentsia: teachers and priests. The most Slovene refugees – according to the recent estimations their number was between 2000 and 3000 – found shelter in the Yugoslav Slovenia where they were rather quickly integrated in the existing social structures.
COBISS.SI-ID: 49807107