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Für die Herrschaft des kroatischen Ustascha-Regimes zwischen 1941 und 1945 war eine rigorose, direktive Sprachpolitik, sprachliche Überwachung und Zensur kennzeichnend.
Bounatirou, Elias Moncef
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‘Ustasha spirit’ and Nationalism in the Independent State of Croatia
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The organization of the Ustasha in the policy of fascist Italy in the Balkans (1929–1941) [PDF]
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Garešnica and the Garešnica region in World War II (1941–1945)
Početkom Drugog svjetskog rata i raspadom Kraljevine Jugoslavije ustaški režim novoosnovane marionetske hrvatske države počinje s progonom srpskog i židovskog stanovništva na garešničkom području. U prosincu 1941.
Karaula, Željko
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Legitimizing Heresy through Law. Bleiburg, Ustasha, and Croatia's WWII Narrative
This piece focuses on Croatia's controversial memorial day, celebrated on May 18, 2024 which commemorates those killed in Bleiburg in 1945, including members of the Nazi-collaborationist Ustasha movement. This memorial day portrays Ustasha fighters, responsible for significant WWII atrocities, as fighters for Croatian freedom and independence ...
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In order to transform the multi-ethnic Nezavisna Država Hrvatska (NDH) into an ethnically homogeneous nation state the Ustashe established extralegal forces which were free to deal, in whatever manner seemed fit, with the political and racial enemies of the Croatian people. In both an ideological and legal sense, the NDH was constructed as the state of
Nevenko Bartulin
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The Ustasha Regime, State, and Nation-Building Process
Within the Axis ‘new order’ regimes, the Ustasha regime, the Independent State of Croatia – NDH, was one of the longest-lasting fascist collaborationist regimes with substantial autonomy and the possibility to develop its own system.[1] The Ustasha ...
Miljan, Goran,
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6 The Interwar Ustasha Movement and Ethnolinguistic-Racial Identity
2014This chapter underlines how misleading it is to define Ustasha ethnic-racial ideas as a negative ideology based on straightforward anti-Serbianism and without 'a coherent elaboration of the Croatian national identity' (Srdja Trifkovic). The Ustashe were ideologically motivated, first and foremost, by anti-Yugoslavism, as they aimed to eradicate the ...
Nevenko Bartulin
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Yugoslavism, Jews and Ustasha Ideology, 19181941
This chapter examines the three dominant national ideologies in the interwar Kingdom of Yugoslavia: Yugoslavism, anti-Yugoslavist Croat nationalism and Greater Serbian nationalism. The chapter explores the development of racial theories in Croatia/Yugoslavia and its importance to all three ideologies, and how the Jews fitted into these theories.
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