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CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
PART I. THE COLLAPSE OF A NATIONAL IDENTITY
Chapter I. Models of Identity in Postcommunist Societies
Zagorka Golubovic
Chapter II. Shifting Identity in Postcommunism
Mirjana Vasovic
Chapter III. Prospects for Democracy in Serbia: An Analysis of the Collective Identities of State, Society and Nation
Vesna Pešic
Chapter IV. Public Political Dialogue and Myth: Some Aspects of the Current Situation in Yugoslavia
Michal Sláde…ek
Chapter V. Preconditions and Obstacles to the Modernization of Serbian/Yugoslav Society
Stjepan Gredelj
Chapter VI. Identity Void: Structural Confusion and Everyday Life in Present-day Serbia
Ivana Spasic
PART II. ELEMENTS FOR A POSTCOMMUNIST IDENTITY
Chapter VII. Democracy and Stability: the Case of Former Yugoslavia
Djordje Paviƒevic
Chapter VIII. The Principle of Citizenship and Pluralism in Identity
Milan Podunavac
Chapter IX. National Identity, Tradition and the Czech Question in the Contemporary World Context -- The Problem of Democracy and the Czech Question
Jaroslav Hroch and Jan Zouhar
Chapter X. The Ethnic and Religious Identification of the Youth in Vojvodina at the End of the 90’s
Smiljana Jovovic, Ljubiša Despotovic and Suzana Stamatovic
Chapter XI. The Problem of Human Identity in the Face of the Global "Free Market" Economy
Oliva Blanchette
PART III. THE BUILDING OF A POSTCOMMUNIST IDENTITY
Chapter XII. Beyond the Liberal Paradigm
Martin Palouš
Chapter XIII. The Czech and Czechoslovak Idea of State Identity as Central-European and Europeanisn
Miloslav Bedná Í
Chapter XIV. The Concept of Models of Identity -- Existence without Identity
Jelena Djuric
Chapter XV. Social Identity and Conflict: A Positive Approach
Byaruhanga Rukooko Archangel
Chapter XVI. Human Identity in Postcommunism and High Modernity
Paul Peachey
Chapter XVII. Identity as Openness to Others
George F. McLean
Acknowledgements
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