The disintegration of Yugoslavia was the result of many factors, not of a single one, but the primary one, the author argues, was commitment of the Yugoslav political elite to the Marxist ideology of withering away of the state. Ideology had a central place in Yugoslav politics. The trend of decentralization of Yugoslavia was not primarily motivated by reasons of ethnic politics, but by Marxist beliefs that the state should be decentralized and weakened until it was finally replaced by a self-managing society, especially the case during the extended period of the last 15 years before the actual breakdown of the Yugoslav socialist federation. Yugoslavia: A State that Withered Away examines the emergence, implementation, crisis, and the breakdown of the fourth (Kardelj's) constitutive concept of Yugoslavia (1974-1990), and relations between anti-statist ideology of self-management and the actual collapse of state institutions.
Introduction 1
Chapter One: Analytical Approaches to Studying the Disintegration of Yugoslavia
Chapter Two: The Kardelj Concept: Constructing the Fourth Yugoslavia (1974-1990)
Chapter Three: The Constitutional Debate 1967-1974: Why did Serbia accept the Kardelj concept and the 1974 Constitution?
Chapter Four: The Economic Crisis: The (Lack of) Response of the Yugoslav Political Elite to Economic Crisis in the Early 1980s
Chapter Five: The Political System Reexamined: The Serbian Question and the Rise of the Defenders and Reformers of the Constitution (1974-1984)
Chapter Six: The Emergence of Alternative Concepts and the Reaction of the Political Elite in Serbia (1984-1988)
Chapter Seven: Slovenia and Serbia: the Final Years of Yugoslavia (1988-1990)
Bibliography
Dejan Jović is a lecturer in politics and director of the Centre for European Neighbourhood Studies at the University of Stirling, Scotland. He is also a book review editor for the Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans.