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Workers and revolution in Serbia

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Analyses the role of workers both in Tito’s Yugoslavia and in the subsequent Serbian revolution against Miloševic in October 2000
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  • 30 November 2013
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This book offers a refreshing new analysis of the role of workers both in Tito’s Yugoslavia and in the subsequent Serbian revolution against Miloševic in October 2000. The authors argue that Tito and the Communist leadership of Yugoslavia saw self-management as a modernising project to compete with the West, and as a disciplining tool for workers in the enterprise. The socialist ideals of self-management were subsequently corrupted by Yugoslavia’s turn to the market. The authors then move on to examining the central role of ordinary workers in overthrowing the nationalist regime of Miloševic and present an account which runs contrary to many descriptions of 'labour weakness' in post-Communist states. Organised labour should be studied as a movement in and of itself rather than as a passive object of external forces. Two labour movement waves have emerged under post-Communism, the first an expression of desire for democracy, the second as a collaboration and clientelism. A third wave, against the ravages of neoliberalism, is only just emerging.
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Price: £85.00
Pages: 160
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 30 November 2013
ISBN: 9780719085086
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, Revolutionary groups and movements, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century, Politics and government, General and world history

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Martin Upchurch is Professor of International Employment Relations at Middlesex University, London

Darko Marinkovic is Professor of Applied Economics at Megatrend University, Belgrade

1. Introduction
2. The Tito years
3. Serbia in the world economy
4. Neoliberalism imposed
5. The workers’ movement
6. Serbia’s new period of crisis
Serbia timeline
References
Index