In this issue of OPREE, three case studies by Gašper Mithans, Evelyn Reuter, and Aleksandra Djurić-Milovanović explore interreligious encounters in Yugoslavia and religious transformations that brought new dynamics in interreligious relations between majority and minority religions
Response to the article The Role of Religions in the War in the Former Yugoslavi
This article characterises and contrasts the most visible changes in the Serbian Church’s public rol...
Response to the article The Role of Religions in the War in the Former Yugoslavi
Under communism, in what used to be Eastern Europe, religion was neither outlawed nor favorably rega...
With the foundation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, the respective nationalities and ...
This special issue of the social research journal ?Culture and Society? contributes to theoretical d...
Dr. Aleksandra Djurić -Milovanović\u27s new book, Double Minorities in Serbia, refers to that popula...
We hope you, our readers, find these reflections on the 30-year anniversary of the Great Transformat...
Former Yugoslavia was a small country on the Balkan peninsula in south-east Europe - one of the most...
Following the end of communism, the former Yugoslav republics experienced a decade of armed conflict...
This special issue of the social research journal “Culture and Society” contributes to theoretical d...
In this paper, my case study highlights Romanian neo-Protestant migrants from Serbia who either retu...
In the last decade and a half the process of desecularization has been undoubtedly verified in Serbi...
In this paper, my case study highlights Romanian neo-Protestant migrants from Serbia who either retu...
-Religious Diversity and the Macedonian Secularist Model-The Study of Religiosity in Belarus -St. Jo...
Response to the article The Role of Religions in the War in the Former Yugoslavi
This article characterises and contrasts the most visible changes in the Serbian Church’s public rol...
Response to the article The Role of Religions in the War in the Former Yugoslavi
Under communism, in what used to be Eastern Europe, religion was neither outlawed nor favorably rega...
With the foundation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, the respective nationalities and ...
This special issue of the social research journal ?Culture and Society? contributes to theoretical d...
Dr. Aleksandra Djurić -Milovanović\u27s new book, Double Minorities in Serbia, refers to that popula...
We hope you, our readers, find these reflections on the 30-year anniversary of the Great Transformat...
Former Yugoslavia was a small country on the Balkan peninsula in south-east Europe - one of the most...
Following the end of communism, the former Yugoslav republics experienced a decade of armed conflict...
This special issue of the social research journal “Culture and Society” contributes to theoretical d...
In this paper, my case study highlights Romanian neo-Protestant migrants from Serbia who either retu...
In the last decade and a half the process of desecularization has been undoubtedly verified in Serbi...
In this paper, my case study highlights Romanian neo-Protestant migrants from Serbia who either retu...
-Religious Diversity and the Macedonian Secularist Model-The Study of Religiosity in Belarus -St. Jo...
Response to the article The Role of Religions in the War in the Former Yugoslavi
This article characterises and contrasts the most visible changes in the Serbian Church’s public rol...
Response to the article The Role of Religions in the War in the Former Yugoslavi