@inbook{
author = "Fundić, Dušan",
year = "2022",
abstract = "This paper will focus on the minorities that played an important role in the politics of Serbian right-wing parties and will therefore not take into consideration, for instance, the Czechoslovakian community, which, as a Slavic ethnic group, was not seen with a negative bias or as a cause of concern. Special emphasis will be placed on the “northern” and “southern” minorities divided according to their geographic distribution in Yugoslavia. The first group included the Germans, Hungarians and Romanians, and the second the Albanians and the small Turkish community. The concluding part of the paper, dedicated to the period 1939-1941, will take a look at the political radicalization in Yugoslavia and the shift in the status of minorities, focusing on the Jews, who began to be seen as “different” and a national minority as late as 1940. As for political parties in Yugoslavia, the paper will focus on the Yugoslav Radical Union as the ruling party from 1935 to 1941 and the Yugoslav People’s M...",
publisher = "Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies SASA",
journal = "The Serbian Right-Wing Parties and Intellectuals in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, 1934-1941",
booktitle = "An Uncomfortable Relationship: the Serbian Right Wing and National Minorities (1934–1941)",
pages = "323-350",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_14107"
}