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| Funder | Arts and Humanities Research Council |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Cambridge |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2022 |
| End Date | Jun 29, 2025 |
| Duration | 1,275 days |
| Number of Grantees | 2 |
| Roles | Student; Supervisor |
| Data Source | UKRI Gateway to Research |
| Grant ID | 2645881 |
My thesis will assess rights-talk in late socialist Yugoslavia, focussing especially on the right to self-determination, a
central tenet of socialist human rights. This will contribute to recent studies on 'socialist rights' in the Eastern Bloc as serious competitors to their Western counterparts, and impact understandings of Yugoslavia's destructive breakup. Socialist Yugoslavia was uniquely positioned outside of the Eastern Bloc, yet has barely been studied in human rights
historiography, with self-determination analysed only in relation to the 1990s secessions of constituent republics. I will
investigate the rights-talk deployed by Yugoslav intellectuals, students, and workers from 1966 to 1989, in ways that both
legitimated and challenged the state. I hope to identify the simultaneous presence of different notions of selfdetermination, how these interacted with other rights, and how different strata of society engaged in rights-talk. Fluent in Serbo-Croatian, I will study sources from Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia. I will assess intellectual rights-talk via
philosophical journals; student rights-talk via youth magazines and research publications; and worker rights-talk (absent from much historiography) via publications addressing workers, official workplace periodicals, workers' letters to the federal and republic governments, and relevant newspaper coverage. I have discussed supervision with Dr Celia Donert,
who has published on rights-talk in socialist Czechoslovakia.
University of Cambridge
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