Slovenian Hopes and Plans in the Last Days of the Habsburg Monarchy

The article analyzes Slovenian perspectives on the possible formations of a state of South Slavs from the final stages of World War I until when the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenians (SCS) was established in 1918. In this period, the most influential Slovenian People's Party (SLS) gr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Austrian history yearbook 2024-05, Vol.55, p.202-219
1. Verfasser: Ivašković, Igor
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description The article analyzes Slovenian perspectives on the possible formations of a state of South Slavs from the final stages of World War I until when the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenians (SCS) was established in 1918. In this period, the most influential Slovenian People's Party (SLS) gradually abandoned the concept of the May Declaration and accepted the idea of unification with Serbia. Despite Slovenian parties seeming to be in harmony on this issue, significant ideological differences separated them, as reflected in the geopolitical parameters of imagined Yugoslav state ideas they envisioned. Further, dissidents from the main parties also developed alternative visions of their own. This article looks at a few of the most prominent alternatives, while determining what distinguishes them from the requirements of the May Declaration, and examines the crucial factors in Slovenians’ decision to join the state of South Slavs with Serbia and to be outside the Habsburg monarchy.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0067237823000899
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source Cambridge Journals Online; Research Library (Alumni Edition); ProQuest research library; Research Library Prep; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; ProQuest Central
subjects Dissent
Geopolitics
Monarchy
Political leadership
Political parties
Slavic cultural groups
Statehood
World War I
title Slovenian Hopes and Plans in the Last Days of the Habsburg Monarchy
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