After the dispute with the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia became more open towards the West than the other Eastern European communist countries. Consequently the question of dissidents in Yugoslavia is not completely identical to similar cases in other communist countries. Nevertheless we can also find intellectuals in Yugoslavia who felt the power of its repression apparatus because of what they said or wrote about the communist regime. The following work contains a detailed presentation of two examples from Slovenia and mentions the most widely known Yugoslav examples of dissidence. The comparison underlines the similarities and differences between dissidence in Slovenia/Yugoslavia and in other Eastern European communist countries.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2889332
The increasing violence of the occupiers, resistance against it and the internal conflict between the Slovenian partisan (revolutionary) and anti partisan (anti revolutionary) camp represents the framework for the following article, which focuses on the functioning and character of the partisan judicial administration during World War II as well as on the influence that the Security Intelligence Service of the Liberation Front and its successors had on it. The functioning of the judiciary was defined by the role of the Communist Party of Slovenia in the partisan movement, since this organisation used the Security Intelligence Service and its successor, Department for the Protection of People, as one of the means for the planned takeover of power.
COBISS.SI-ID: 2888308