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Socialist Republic of Croatia

The Socialist Republic of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Socijalistička Republika Hrvatska / Социјалистичка Република Хрватска), commonly referred to as SR Croatia or simply Croatia, was a constituent republic and federated state of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. By its constitution, modern-day Croatia is its direct continuation.

Federal State of Croatia (1943–1945)
Federalna Država Hrvatska (Serbo-Croatian)

People's Republic of Croatia (1946–1963)
Narodna Republika Hrvatska (Serbo-Croatian)


Socialist Republic of Croatia (1963–1990)
Socijalistička Republika Hrvatska (Serbo-Croatian)


Republic of Croatia (1990–1991)
Republika Hrvatska (Serbo-Croatian)
1943–1991
Anthem: "Lijepa naša domovino" (1972–1991)[1]
(English: "Our Beautiful Homeland")
Location of Croatia in Yugoslavia
StatusConstituent republic of Yugoslavia
CapitalZagreb
Common languagesCroato-Serbian
(Croatian standard)
Government1945–1948:
Marxist–Leninist one-party socialist republic
1948–1990:
Titoist one-party socialist republic
1990–1991:
Semi-presidential constitutional republic
Head of state 
• 1943–1949 (first)
Vladimir Nazor
• 1990–1991 (last)
Franjo Tuđman
Head of government 
• 1945–1953 (first)
Vladimir Bakarić
• 1990–1991 (last)
Josip Manolić
Party leader 
• 1943–1944 (first)
Andrija Hebrang
• 1989–1990 (last)
Ivica Račan
LegislatureSabor
Chamber of Counties (1990–1991)
Chamber of Representatives (1990–1991)
Historical eraCold War
• ZAVNOH
13 and 14 June 1943
8 May 1945
1971
22 December 1990
19 May 1991
25 June 1991
March 1991 – November 1995
Area
199156,594[2] km2 (21,851 sq mi)
Population
• 1991
4,784,265[3]
HDI (1991) 0.672
medium
ISO 3166 codeHR
  1. ^ Referred to in the 1974 Constitution as the "Croatian Literary Language" and as the "Croat or Serb language"[4]

Along with five other Yugoslav republics, it was formed during World War II and became a socialist republic after the war. It had four full official names during its 48-year existence (see below). By territory and population, it was the second largest republic in Yugoslavia, after the Socialist Republic of Serbia.

In 1990, the government dismantled the single-party system of government – installed by the League of Communists – and adopted a multi-party democracy. The newly elected government of Franjo Tuđman moved the republic towards independence, formally seceding from Yugoslavia in 1991 and thereby contributing to its dissolution.

Names

Croatia became part of the Yugoslav federation in 1943 after the Second Session of the AVNOJ and through the resolutions of the ZAVNOH, Croatia's wartime deliberative body. It was officially founded as the Federal State of Croatia (Croatian: Federalna Država Hrvatska, FD Hrvatska)[5] on May 9, 1944, at the 3rd session of the ZAVNOH. Yugoslavia was then called Democratic Federal Yugoslavia (Demokratska Federativna Jugoslavija, DFJ), it was not a constitutionally socialist state, or even a republic, in anticipation of the conclusion of the war, when these issues were settled. On November 29, 1945, Democratic Federal Yugoslavia became the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (Federativna Narodna Republika Jugoslavija, FNRJ), a socialist People's Republic. Accordingly, the Federal State of Croatia became the People's Republic of Croatia (Narodna Republika Hrvatska, NR Hrvatska).

On April 7, 1963, the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (FPRY) was renamed the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). Yugoslavia (and therefore Croatia) gradually abandoned Stalinism after the Tito–Stalin split in 1948. In 1963 the People's Republic of Croatia also accordingly became the Socialist Republic of Croatia.

On December 22, 1990, a new Constitution was adopted, under which the Socialist Republic of Croatia was simply renamed as the Republic of Croatia. It was under this constitution that Croatia became independent on June 25, 1991.

The republic was commonly referred to as simply as Croatia.

Establishment

World War II

 
"All in the fight for the freedom of Croatia", Partisan poster from World War II.

In the first years of the war, the Yugoslav Partisans in Croatia did not have considerable support from Croats, with an exception of the Croats in the Croatian region of Dalmatia. The majority of partisans on the territory of Croatia were Croatian Serbs. However, in 1943 Croats started to join the partisans in larger numbers. In 1943, the number of Croat partisans in Croatia increased, so in 1944 they made up 61% of the partisans in the territory of Independent State of Croatia, while Serbs made up 28%; all other ethnicities made up the remaining 11%.[6]

On 13 June 1943 in Otočac, Lika, Croatian partisans founded the ZAVNOH (National Anti-Fascist Council of the People's Liberation of Croatia), a legislative body of the future Croatian republic within Yugoslavia. Its first president was Vladimir Nazor. Croatian partisans had autonomy along with the Slovene and Macedonian partisans. However, on 1 March 1945 they were put under the command of the Supreme Command of the Yugoslav Army, thus losing their autonomy. Partisans of Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina did not have such autonomy.[7]

Because of partisan victories and increased territory held by partisans, AVNOJ decided to hold the second session in Jajce at the end of November 1943. At that session, the Yugoslav communist leadership decided to reestablish Yugoslavia as federal state.[8]

Creation

On November 29, 1945, the Yugoslav Constituent Assembly held a session where it was decided that Croatia would be joined by five other republics in Yugoslavia: Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Serbia and Macedonia. Not long after, the Communist Party started to prosecute those who opposed the communist one-party system. On January 30, 1946, the Constituent Assembly ratified the Constitution of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia.[9] Croatia was the last of the republics to make its own constitution, which was mostly the same as the federal and other republic constitutions. The Constitution of the People's Republic of Croatia was adopted by the Constituent Parliament of the People's Republic of Croatia on January 18, 1947.[10] In their constitutions, all republics were deprived of gaining independence.[11]

Republics had only formal autonomy; initially, communist Yugoslavia was a highly centralized state, based on the Soviet model. The Communist Party's officials were, at the same time, state officials, while the Party's Central Committee was de jure, the highest organ of the party; however, main decisions were made by the Politburo. The governments of the republics were only part of the mechanism which executed the Politburo's decisions.[10]

Election

 
Ivan Šubašić, Prime Minister of Yugoslavia in exile and prominent member of the Croatian Peasant Party.

In post-war Yugoslavia, communists had a struggle for power with the opposition that supported King Peter. Milan Grol was the leader of the opposition; as the leading figure of the opposition he opposed the idea of a federal state, denied the right for Montenegrins and Macedonians to have their republics, and held that an agreement between Tito and Ivan Šubašić guaranteed that the opposition needed to have half of the ministers in the new government.[12] The Croatian Peasant Party (HSS), part of the opposition, had divided into three branches: one supporting the Ustaše, the other supporting the communists and the third supporting Vladko Maček.[13] However, communists had the majority in parliament and control over the army, leaving the opposition without any real power.[12] Šubašić had his own supporters within the HSS and he tried to unite the party once again, believing that, once united, it would be a major political factor in the country. The Croatian Republican Peasant Party, a party split from the HSS, wanted to enter the People's Front, a suprapolitical organization controlled by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Šubašić knew that this would put the HSS under control of the communists and ended the negotiations about unification.[14]

In the election campaign, the opposition parties wanted to unite with the Serbian Radical Party and other parties; however, communist activities, using various wiles, ruined their plan. On August 20, 1945, Grol resigned and accused the communists of breaking the Tito–Šubašić agreement. Šubašić himself was also soon forced to resign at the end of October as he also disassociated himself from Tito. Soon, the communists won the election. They won an absolute majority in the parliament which enabled them to create their own form of Yugoslavia.[15]

Politics and government

 
Coat of arms SR Croatia

The People's Republic of Croatia adopted its first Constitution in 1947. In 1953 followed "The Constitutional Law on the Basics of Social and Political Organization and on Republican Organs of Authority", actually a completely new constitution. The second (technically third) Constitution was adopted in 1963; it changed the name of the People's Republic of Croatia (NRH) into the Socialist Republic of Croatia (SRH). Major constitutional amendments were approved in 1971, and in 1974 followed a new Constitution of the SR Croatia which emphasized Croatian statehood as a constituent republic of the SFRY. All the constitutions and amendments were adopted by the Parliament of Croatia (Croatian: Sabor). After the first multi-party parliamentary elections held in April 1990, the Parliament made various constitutional changes and dropped the prefix "socialist" from the official name, so the "Socialist Republic of Croatia" became simply the "Republic of Croatia" (RH).[16] On 22 December 1990, the Parliament rejected the communist one-party system and adopted a liberal democracy through the Constitution of Croatia.[17] It was under this Constitution that independence would be proclaimed on 25 June 1991 (after the Croatian independence referendum held on 19 May 1991).

According to the Art. 1.2 of the 1974 Croatian Constitution, the Socialist Republic of Croatia was defined as "a national state of the Croatian people, the state of the Serbian people in Croatia and the state of other nationalities living in it".

Period Government branches
1947–1953 Organs of state authority Organs of state administration
Parliament Presidium of the Parliament Government
1953–1971 Parliament Executive Council Republic Administration
1971–1974 Parliament Presidency of the Parliament Executive Council Republic Administration
1974–1990 Parliament Presidency of the Republic Executive Council Republic Administration
1990–1991 Parliament President Government

Tito period

 
Vladimir Bakarić, the first head of government of the SR Croatia.

The first post-war head of state of the Socialist Republic of Croatia was Vladimir Nazor (actually President of the Presidium of the Parliament of the People's Republic of Croatia), who was, during the war, Chairman of the State Antifascist Council of the People's Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH), while the first head of government was Vladimir Bakarić. Ironically, even though communists promoted federalism, post-war Yugoslavia was strictly centralized.[18] The main organ was the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Croatia (from 1952 the League of Communists of Croatia) made of around ten persons. Its members were assigned to certain fields: one controlled the armed forces, another the development of the state, a third the economy etc. Ostensibly, the system of government was representative democracy: people would elect councillors and members of parliaments. However, the real power was in the hands of executive organs. Representative organs (the Parliament and various councils on local and district levels) only served to give legitimacy to their decisions. [19] The party that ruled the SR Croatia was the branch of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, the Communist Party of Croatia (KPH). Even though the party had a Croatian name, its membership was only 57% Croats, along with 43% Serb. The majority of members were peasants and the majority was half-educated.[20]

Soon after they gained power, the Communists started to persecute former officials of the Independent State of Croatia in order to compromise them to the general public. On 6 June 1946, the Supreme Court of the SR Croatia sentenced some of the leading officials of the NDH, including Slavko Kvaternik, Vladimir Košak, Miroslav Navratil, Ivan Perčević, Mehmed Alajbegović, Osman Kulenović and others. Communists also had a number of major and minor show trials in order to deal with the fascist regime of the NDH. Also, local leaders of the civic parties would often "disappear" without any witness.[21] Communists not only cleansed the officials who were working for the NDH, but also those who supported the Croatian Peasant Party and the Catholic Church.[22]

The only major civic party in Croatia, the Croatian Republican Peasant Party, was active only a few years after the election, but as a satellite of the Communist Party. The clash with the civic anti-communist forces stimulated the Communist Party's centralism and authoritarianism. [21]

When he took power, Tito knew that the greatest threat to the development of communism in Yugoslavia was nationalism. Because of that, the communists would crush even the slightest form of nationalism by repression. The communists made the most effort to crush nationalism in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia and tried to suppress the hatred between Croats, Serbs and Muslims, but even so, their greatest supporters in this process were local Serbs. Soon, the Serbs were overrepresented in the Croatian and Bosnian state and party leadership.[18]

After Tito's death

In 1980, Josip Broz Tito died. Political and economic difficulties started to mount and the federal government began to crumble. The federal government realised that it was unable to service the interest on its loans and started negotiations with the IMF that continued for years. Public polemics in Croatia concerning the need to help poor and less developed regions became more frequent, as Croatia and Slovenia contributed about 60 percent of those funds.[23] The debt crisis, together with soaring inflation, forced the federal government to introduce measures such as the foreign currency law for earnings of export firms. Ante Marković, a Bosnian Croat who was at the time the Croatian head of government, said that Croatia would lose around $800 million because of that law.[24] Marković became the last head of government of Yugoslavia in 1989 and spent two years implementing various economic and political reforms. His government's efforts were initially successful, but ultimately they failed due to the incurable political instability of the SFRY.

Ethnic tensions were on the increase and would result in the demise of Yugoslavia. The growing crisis in Kosovo, the nationalist memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, the emergence of Slobodan Milošević as the leader of Serbia, and everything else that followed provoked a very negative reaction in Croatia. The fifty-year-old rift was starting to resurface, and the Croats increasingly began to show their own national feelings and express opposition towards the Belgrade regime.

On October 17, 1989, the rock group Prljavo kazalište held a major concert before almost 250,000 people in the central Zagreb city square. In light of the changing political circumstances, their song "Mojoj majci" ("To my mother"), where the songwriter hailed the mother in the song as "the last rose of Croatia", was taken to heart by the fans on the location and many more elsewhere because of the expressed patriotism. On October 26, parliament declared All Saints Day (November 1) a public holiday.

In January 1990, during the 14th Congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, the delegation of Serbia led by Milošević insisted on replacing the 1974 constitutional policy that empowered the republics with a policy of "one person, one vote", which would benefit the majority Serb population. This caused first the Slovenian and then Croatian delegations (led by Milan Kučan and Ivica Račan, respectively) to leave the Congress in protest and marked a culmination in the rift of the ruling party.

Ethnic Serbs, who constituted 12% of the population of Croatia, rejected the notion of separation from Yugoslavia. Serb politicians feared the loss of influence they previously had through their membership of the League of Communists in Croatia (that some Croats claimed was disproportionate). Memories from the Second World War were evoked by the rhetoric coming from the Belgrade administration. As Milošević and his clique rode the wave of Serbian nationalism across Yugoslavia, talking about battles to be fought for Serbdom, emerging Croatian leader Franjo Tuđman reciprocated with talk about making Croatia a nation state. The availability of mass media allowed for propaganda to be spread fast and spark jingoism and fear, creating a war climate.

In February 1990, SR Croatia changed its constitutional system to a multi-party system.[25]

In March 1991, the Yugoslav People's Army met with the Presidency of Yugoslavia (an eight-member council composed of representatives from six republics and two autonomous provinces) in an attempt to get them to declare a state of emergency which would allow for the army to take control of the country. Serbian and Serb-dominated representatives (Montenegro, Vojvodina and Kosovo) already in agreement with the army, voted for the proposal, but as representatives of Croatia, Slovenia, Macedonia and Bosnia voted against, the plot failed. The dying country had yet to see a few more Serb leadership's attempts to push the plan for centralizing the power in Belgrade, but because of resistance in all other republics, the crisis only deteriorated.

Transition to independence

The 1990 Croatian parliamentary election was held on April 22 and May 6, 1990. After the first multi-party elections, the creation of a constituent republic based on democratic institutions occurred.

After the first free elections, in July 1990, the prefix "socialist" was dropped, and thereafter Croatia was named the Republic of Croatia.[26]

Franjo Tuđman was elected president and his government embarked on a path toward the independence of Croatia.

Economy

Economic model and theory

The economy of the SFR Yugoslavia and thus of the Socialist Republic of Croatia was initially influenced by the Soviet Union. As the Communist Party of Yugoslavia was a member of the Communist International, Yugoslav communists thought that the Soviet way to socialism was the only option to create a socialist state. In the early years of the SFR Yugoslavia, Communist members suppressed critics towards the Soviet Union and harbored sympathies towards it.[27]

In the CPY, it was generally thought that state ownership and centralism were the only ways to avoid economic breakdown and that without the state ownership and administrative control it would be impossible to accumulate vast resources, material and human, for economic development. Since every undeveloped country needs vast resources in order to start developing, and Yugoslavia was among them, communists thought that this was the only way to save the economy of Yugoslavia. Also, their ideology included elimination of the private sector, as they thought that such an economic system was historically wasteful.[28]

Economy during the war

The first process of nationalization started on 24 November 1944, when Yugoslav Partisans dispossessed their enemies of their assets. The first victims of the confiscation were occupiers and war criminals. However, not long after, the assets of 199,541 Germans, the whole German minority, including 68,781 ha of land, were confiscated as well. Until the end of the war, the state controlled 55% of industry, 70% of mining, 90% of ferrous metallurgy and 100% of the oil industry.[29]

Renewal of economy

In the SR Croatia, material damage and losses were high. In the war, the SR Croatia lost 298,000 people, 7.8% of its total population. Because of the 4-year partisan war, bombings, over-exploitation of raw materials and agricultural resources, and destruction of roads and industrial facilities, the state entered into economic chaos. The peasantry that supplied all the conflicted sides in the war was wasted and human losses were also high.[30] The damage of industry in Yugoslavia was the worst in the whole of Europe, while the SR Croatia was among the most damaged republics of Yugoslavia, along with Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro.[31] The communist authority needed to do something in order to prevent hunger, disorder and chaos. Yugoslavia lacked qualified workers, so the economy's renewal was mostly based on mass volunteer work. The recruitment for volunteer work was conducted with propaganda about a better communist future, especially among members of Yugoslav partisans and youth. Another segment of these labourers were those who feared persecution, mainly opponents of the communist regime and Nazi collaborators. They entered volunteer labour in order to escape persecution. A third segment of the work force consisted of prisoners of war, who worked the hardest jobs.[30]

The distribution of food and material needed for industry depended on fast renewal of damaged roads. The Zagreb-Belgrade railway had been in reconstruction day and night, so the first train to travel this railway after the war, did it already at the end of June 1945. Mine fields were also being cleared.[30]

Even though relations between the Western countries and Yugoslavia were tense, significant help to the people of Yugoslavia came from the UNRRA, an American aid agency formed as a branch of the United Nations. They distributed food, clothes and shoes, which helped the communists avoid hunger. Between 1945 and 1946, the UNRRA deployed 2.5 million tons of goods, mostly food,[30] worth US$415 million. This amount was equal to twice the imports of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1938, or 135% of its tax revenues. It is generally thought that UNRRA fed and clothed some 5 million people.[32]

Agrarian reform

 
Map showing the economic development of the Yugoslav republics in 1947 (average development is 100%).

At the same time as the persecution of political enemies, communist authorities conducted the Agrarian Reform,[33] a reform made on 23 August 1945.[29] This process included dispossession of wealthy citizens and peasants. Agrarian Reform changed the ownership relations of agricultural properties. Land that was above 35 acres was taken from its owners. Nearly half of taken lands were transformed to agricultural areas (state property), while the other half was given to poor peasants. This reform also included the colonization in the SR Croatia where people from the so-called depressed areas moved to areas from which the Volksdeutsche had been expelled. In the SR Croatia, colonization occurred in Slavonia, while colonists were the poor peasants, mostly Croatian and Bosnian Serbs.[29] The confiscation of property was also conducted; people who were trading during the war were declared war profiteers and by this, the state gained factories, banks and large shops.[33]

The communists also introduced a new way of distribution of agricultural products. In order to supply the people who lived in towns and cities, they introduced the redemption of those products. The policy of distribution was based on the idea that the working segment of society should have an advantage in quantity and diversity of goods over the non-working, parasitic segment. This led to development of black markets and speculation.[34]

The next step in the implementation of the Agrarian Reform was nationalization of the large assets of the bourgeois segment of the population.[33] On 28 April 1948, when small shops and the majority of crafts had been nationalized, the private sector in the SR Croatia was liquidated to the end; out of 5,395 private shops, only 5 remained active. This decision was a double-edged sword: while the poor segment of society was satisfied by it, the large majority of the population was resistant and ready to revolt.[29] Just like in the Soviet Union, the state controlled the entire economy, while free trade was forbidden in favour of central planning. Because of this, the state started rational distribution of necessities for living, which were distributed among the population based on remittances, while consumers gained a certain amount of certificates each month for buying a certain amount of certain goods, including food, clothes and shoes.[33]

In the spring of 1949, the state introduced high taxes on private farmer's economies which farmers were unable to pay. This forced them to enter into the peasant labour unions, formed based on the Soviet kolhozes. In such a manner, the state introduced forced collectivization of villages.[35] This collectivization soon disappointed the poor peasants who got their land for free in the process of dispossession of wealthy peasants. Even though the communists thought that collectivization would solve the problem with food, on the contrary, the collectivization created the so-called "Bread Crisis" in 1949.[29] The process of dispossession in Yugoslavia lasted from the middle of 1945 until the end of 1949. It was the fastest process of dispossession, even compared to East European communist states.[35]

For this process, the state needed a large number of officials who were members of the Communist Party, receiving orders from the Politburo, thus leaving the Yugoslav republic without any power in the economy. The economy of one republic was depending on decisions made by the Politburo in Belgrade, thus Yugoslavia become a strictly centralized state.[36] Moreover, the liquidation of the private sector, cleansing of the state apparatus and high officials and their replacement by half-educated partisans, drastic reduction of the gap between payments of ministers and workers (3:1), and emigration and deaths of the bourgeois class led to the disappearance of the middle class in the social structure, which had a negative effect on social life.[37]

Industrialization

Five-Year Plan

 
Andrija Hebrang, 4th Secretary of the Communist Party of Croatia, a creator of the Five-Year Plan

Industrialization was the most significant process in the economic development of the SR Croatia, as communists promoted industrialization as the main factor in fast development.[31] After the process of renewal, the process of industrialization and electrification started based on the Soviet model.[38] The whole economy, the creation of a system and the formulation of the strategy of development in the Five-Year Plan, was in the charge of Andrija Hebrang. As President of the Economy Council and President of the Planning Commission, Hebrang was in charge of all ministries that dealt with the economy. Alongside Tito, Edvard Kardelj and Aleksandar Ranković, he was the most influential person in Yugoslavia. As a chief of the whole economy, Hebrang finished his Five-Year Plan in winter 1946–47 which was approved by the government in spring 1947. Because of the lack of knowledge, the Plan copied the Soviet model. The factories which were built faster were factories that were in the sector of heavy and military industry, of which the most known in SR Croatia were "Rade Končar" and "Prvomajska".[32]

In the Five-Year Plan, Hebrang wanted to increase the industrial production by five times and agricultural production by 1.5 times, increase the GDP per capita by 1.8 times and the national revenues by 1.8 times. The plan also included the increase of qualified workers, from 350,000 to 750,000. For the SR Croatia, it was decided that its industrial production needed to be increased by 452%. The fast development in industry required a high number of workers, so from 461,000 workers in 1945, in 1949 there were 1,990,000 workers. On 17 January 1947, Kardelj stated to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Croatia that Yugoslavia would be industrially stronger than Austria and Czechoslovakia. Both Kardelj and Bakarić advocated development of light industry, instead of Hebrang's idea for industry that would serve agriculture. The Five-Year Plan was indeed exaggerated; this plan did not have qualified personnel, market (placement) and capital; even so, the state continued with its implementation.[39]

All across the country, the state built the sites, and all projects of industrialization and electrification were made with propaganda that the population would have lower poverty and unemployment. The unemployment was indeed reduced, however, new employees were not educated for their jobs, so many objects were built slowly and many of them were not built at all. Following the current views of the Communist Party, the role of leading the economy was given to the directorate-generals, as a link between the ministries and the Party's leadership. By their implementation, the state gained even greater control over the economy. The companies had their legal person; however, they did not have operational autonomy, since they were, as state organs, under state control.[38]

Religion

The majority of residents were Roman Catholics and approximately 12% of the population were Orthodox Christians of the Serbian Patriarchy, with a small number of other religions. Due to strained relationships between the Holy See and communist Yugoslav officials, no new Catholic bishops were appointed in the People's Republic of Croatia until 1960. This left the dioceses of Križevci, Đakovo-Osijek, Zadar, Šibenik, Split-Makarska, Dubrovnik, Rijeka and Poreč-Pula without bishops for several years.[40] From the mid-1950s, there were only four seated bishops in Croatia in three dioceses: Aloysius Stepinac, Franjo Salis-Seewiss, Mihovil Pušić, and Josip Srebrnič.

Many priests accused of collaboration with the Ustaše and Axis during World War II were arrested after the end of World War II amid conflicts between the Catholic Church and the Allied Powers, including the Archbishop of Zagreb, Aloysius Stepinac. Aloysius Stepinac was arrested on 16 September 1946. He was sentenced to sixteen years' imprisonment, but, in December 1951, he was released to house arrest at his home in Krašić near Jastrebarsko, where he died in 1960.[41] Stepinac was made a cardinal in 1953 by Pope Pious XII.

Symbols

See also

References

  1. ^ "Državna obilježja" [State symbols] (in Croatian). Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs (Croatia). Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  2. ^ Dolezal, Dalibor (2016). Arnull, Elaine; Fox, Darrell (eds.). Cultural Perspectives on Youth Justice: Connecting Theory, Policy and International Practice. New York City: Springer. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-13743-397-8.
  3. ^ "POPULATION BY ETHNICITY, 1971 – 2011 CENSUSES". Croatian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
  4. ^ "Ustav Socijalističke Republike Hrvatske (1974), Član 138" [Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1974), Article 138] (PDF) (in Croatian). Narodne novine. 22 February 1974. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
  5. ^ Traditional translation, one more accurate would be the Federated State of Croatia
  6. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 95.
  7. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 215.
  8. ^ Matković 2003, p. 257.
  9. ^ Matković 2003, p. 280.
  10. ^ a b Matković 2003, p. 281.
  11. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 208.
  12. ^ a b Matković 2003, p. 272.
  13. ^ Matković 2003, p. 274.
  14. ^ Matković 2003, p. 276.
  15. ^ Matković 2003, p. 277.
  16. ^ Sabor (July 25, 1990). "Odluka o proglašenju Amandmana LXIV. do LXXV. na Ustav Socijalističke Republike Hrvatske". Narodne novine (in Croatian). Retrieved 2011-12-27.
  17. ^ Sabor (December 22, 1990). "Ustav Republike Hrvatske". Narodne novine (in Croatian). Retrieved 2011-12-27.
  18. ^ a b Bilandžić 1999, p. 218.
  19. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 219.
  20. ^ Bilandžić, p. 235.
  21. ^ a b Bilandžić 1999, p. 209.
  22. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 235.
  23. ^ Goldstein 1999, p. 190.
  24. ^ Tanner 2001, p. 207.
  25. ^ "Odluka o proglašenju Amandmana LIV. do LXIII. na Ustav Socijalističke Republike Hrvatske". Narodne novine (in Croatian). February 14, 1990. Retrieved May 9, 2009.
  26. ^ "Odluka o proglašenju Amandmana LXIV. do LXXV. na Ustav Socijalističke Republike Hrvatske". Narodne novine (in Croatian). July 25, 1990. Retrieved April 27, 2009.
  27. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 210-211.
  28. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 211.
  29. ^ a b c d e Bilandžić 1999, p. 212.
  30. ^ a b c d Matković 2003, p. 293.
  31. ^ a b Bilandžić 1999, p. 223.
  32. ^ a b Bilandžić 1999, p. 224.
  33. ^ a b c d Matković 2003, p. 286.
  34. ^ Matković 2003, p. 294.
  35. ^ a b Matković 2003, p. 286-287.
  36. ^ Matković 2003, p. 287.
  37. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 213.
  38. ^ a b Matković 2003, p. 295.
  39. ^ Bilandžić 1999, p. 225.
  40. ^ Catholic Dioceses in Croatia
  41. ^ Matković 2003, p. 284.

Sources

Coordinates: 45°49′00″N 15°59′00″E / 45.8167°N 15.9833°E / 45.8167; 15.9833

socialist, republic, croatia, serbo, croatian, socijalistička, republika, hrvatska, Социјалистичка, Република, Хрватска, commonly, referred, croatia, simply, croatia, constituent, republic, federated, state, socialist, federal, republic, yugoslavia, constituti. The Socialist Republic of Croatia Serbo Croatian Socijalisticka Republika Hrvatska Sociјalistichka Republika Hrvatska commonly referred to as SR Croatia or simply Croatia was a constituent republic and federated state of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia By its constitution modern day Croatia is its direct continuation Federal State of Croatia 1943 1945 Federalna Drzava Hrvatska Serbo Croatian People s Republic of Croatia 1946 1963 Narodna Republika Hrvatska Serbo Croatian Socialist Republic of Croatia 1963 1990 Socijalisticka Republika Hrvatska Serbo Croatian Republic of Croatia 1990 1991 Republika Hrvatska Serbo Croatian 1943 1991Top Flag 1947 1990 Emblem 1947 1990 Anthem Lijepa nasa domovino 1972 1991 1 English Our Beautiful Homeland source source track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track track Location of Croatia in YugoslaviaStatusConstituent republic of YugoslaviaCapitalZagrebCommon languagesCroato Serbian Croatian standard Government1945 1948 Marxist Leninist one party socialist republic 1948 1990 Titoist one party socialist republic1990 1991 Semi presidential constitutional republicHead of state 1943 1949 first Vladimir Nazor 1990 1991 last Franjo TuđmanHead of government 1945 1953 first Vladimir Bakaric 1990 1991 last Josip ManolicParty leader 1943 1944 first Andrija Hebrang 1989 1990 last Ivica RacanLegislatureSabor Upper houseChamber of Counties 1990 1991 Lower houseChamber of Representatives 1990 1991 Historical eraCold War ZAVNOH13 and 14 June 1943 End of World War II8 May 1945 Croatian Spring1971 Last Constitution adopted22 December 1990 Independence referendum19 May 1991 Independence declared25 June 1991 War of IndependenceMarch 1991 November 1995Area199156 594 2 km2 21 851 sq mi Population 19914 784 265 3 HDI 1991 0 672mediumISO 3166 codeHRPreceded by Succeeded byDemocratic Federal YugoslaviaKingdom of HungaryKingdom of ItalyFree Territory of Trieste CroatiaSAO KrajinaSAO Western SlavoniaSAO Eastern Slavonia Baranja and Western SyrmiaDubrovnik Republic Referred to in the 1974 Constitution as the Croatian Literary Language and as the Croat or Serb language 4 Along with five other Yugoslav republics it was formed during World War II and became a socialist republic after the war It had four full official names during its 48 year existence see below By territory and population it was the second largest republic in Yugoslavia after the Socialist Republic of Serbia In 1990 the government dismantled the single party system of government installed by the League of Communists and adopted a multi party democracy The newly elected government of Franjo Tuđman moved the republic towards independence formally seceding from Yugoslavia in 1991 and thereby contributing to its dissolution Contents 1 Names 2 Establishment 2 1 World War II 2 2 Creation 2 3 Election 3 Politics and government 3 1 Tito period 3 2 After Tito s death 3 3 Transition to independence 4 Economy 4 1 Economic model and theory 4 2 Economy during the war 4 3 Renewal of economy 4 4 Agrarian reform 4 5 Industrialization 4 5 1 Five Year Plan 5 Religion 6 Symbols 7 See also 8 References 9 SourcesNames EditCroatia became part of the Yugoslav federation in 1943 after the Second Session of the AVNOJ and through the resolutions of the ZAVNOH Croatia s wartime deliberative body It was officially founded as the Federal State of Croatia Croatian Federalna Drzava Hrvatska FD Hrvatska 5 on May 9 1944 at the 3rd session of the ZAVNOH Yugoslavia was then called Democratic Federal Yugoslavia Demokratska Federativna Jugoslavija DFJ it was not a constitutionally socialist state or even a republic in anticipation of the conclusion of the war when these issues were settled On November 29 1945 Democratic Federal Yugoslavia became the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia Federativna Narodna Republika Jugoslavija FNRJ a socialist People s Republic Accordingly the Federal State of Croatia became the People s Republic of Croatia Narodna Republika Hrvatska NR Hrvatska On April 7 1963 the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia FPRY was renamed the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia SFRY Yugoslavia and therefore Croatia gradually abandoned Stalinism after the Tito Stalin split in 1948 In 1963 the People s Republic of Croatia also accordingly became the Socialist Republic of Croatia On December 22 1990 a new Constitution was adopted under which the Socialist Republic of Croatia was simply renamed as the Republic of Croatia It was under this constitution that Croatia became independent on June 25 1991 The republic was commonly referred to as simply as Croatia Establishment EditWorld War II Edit All in the fight for the freedom of Croatia Partisan poster from World War II In the first years of the war the Yugoslav Partisans in Croatia did not have considerable support from Croats with an exception of the Croats in the Croatian region of Dalmatia The majority of partisans on the territory of Croatia were Croatian Serbs However in 1943 Croats started to join the partisans in larger numbers In 1943 the number of Croat partisans in Croatia increased so in 1944 they made up 61 of the partisans in the territory of Independent State of Croatia while Serbs made up 28 all other ethnicities made up the remaining 11 6 On 13 June 1943 in Otocac Lika Croatian partisans founded the ZAVNOH National Anti Fascist Council of the People s Liberation of Croatia a legislative body of the future Croatian republic within Yugoslavia Its first president was Vladimir Nazor Croatian partisans had autonomy along with the Slovene and Macedonian partisans However on 1 March 1945 they were put under the command of the Supreme Command of the Yugoslav Army thus losing their autonomy Partisans of Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina did not have such autonomy 7 Because of partisan victories and increased territory held by partisans AVNOJ decided to hold the second session in Jajce at the end of November 1943 At that session the Yugoslav communist leadership decided to reestablish Yugoslavia as federal state 8 Creation Edit On November 29 1945 the Yugoslav Constituent Assembly held a session where it was decided that Croatia would be joined by five other republics in Yugoslavia Slovenia Bosnia and Herzegovina Montenegro Serbia and Macedonia Not long after the Communist Party started to prosecute those who opposed the communist one party system On January 30 1946 the Constituent Assembly ratified the Constitution of the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia 9 Croatia was the last of the republics to make its own constitution which was mostly the same as the federal and other republic constitutions The Constitution of the People s Republic of Croatia was adopted by the Constituent Parliament of the People s Republic of Croatia on January 18 1947 10 In their constitutions all republics were deprived of gaining independence 11 Republics had only formal autonomy initially communist Yugoslavia was a highly centralized state based on the Soviet model The Communist Party s officials were at the same time state officials while the Party s Central Committee was de jure the highest organ of the party however main decisions were made by the Politburo The governments of the republics were only part of the mechanism which executed the Politburo s decisions 10 Election Edit Ivan Subasic Prime Minister of Yugoslavia in exile and prominent member of the Croatian Peasant Party In post war Yugoslavia communists had a struggle for power with the opposition that supported King Peter Milan Grol was the leader of the opposition as the leading figure of the opposition he opposed the idea of a federal state denied the right for Montenegrins and Macedonians to have their republics and held that an agreement between Tito and Ivan Subasic guaranteed that the opposition needed to have half of the ministers in the new government 12 The Croatian Peasant Party HSS part of the opposition had divided into three branches one supporting the Ustase the other supporting the communists and the third supporting Vladko Macek 13 However communists had the majority in parliament and control over the army leaving the opposition without any real power 12 Subasic had his own supporters within the HSS and he tried to unite the party once again believing that once united it would be a major political factor in the country The Croatian Republican Peasant Party a party split from the HSS wanted to enter the People s Front a suprapolitical organization controlled by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia Subasic knew that this would put the HSS under control of the communists and ended the negotiations about unification 14 In the election campaign the opposition parties wanted to unite with the Serbian Radical Party and other parties however communist activities using various wiles ruined their plan On August 20 1945 Grol resigned and accused the communists of breaking the Tito Subasic agreement Subasic himself was also soon forced to resign at the end of October as he also disassociated himself from Tito Soon the communists won the election They won an absolute majority in the parliament which enabled them to create their own form of Yugoslavia 15 Politics and government EditMain article Politics of the Socialist Republic of Croatia Coat of arms SR Croatia The People s Republic of Croatia adopted its first Constitution in 1947 In 1953 followed The Constitutional Law on the Basics of Social and Political Organization and on Republican Organs of Authority actually a completely new constitution The second technically third Constitution was adopted in 1963 it changed the name of the People s Republic of Croatia NRH into the Socialist Republic of Croatia SRH Major constitutional amendments were approved in 1971 and in 1974 followed a new Constitution of the SR Croatia which emphasized Croatian statehood as a constituent republic of the SFRY All the constitutions and amendments were adopted by the Parliament of Croatia Croatian Sabor After the first multi party parliamentary elections held in April 1990 the Parliament made various constitutional changes and dropped the prefix socialist from the official name so the Socialist Republic of Croatia became simply the Republic of Croatia RH 16 On 22 December 1990 the Parliament rejected the communist one party system and adopted a liberal democracy through the Constitution of Croatia 17 It was under this Constitution that independence would be proclaimed on 25 June 1991 after the Croatian independence referendum held on 19 May 1991 According to the Art 1 2 of the 1974 Croatian Constitution the Socialist Republic of Croatia was defined as a national state of the Croatian people the state of the Serbian people in Croatia and the state of other nationalities living in it Period Government branches1947 1953 Organs of state authority Organs of state administrationParliament Presidium of the Parliament Government1953 1971 Parliament Executive Council Republic Administration1971 1974 Parliament Presidency of the Parliament Executive Council Republic Administration1974 1990 Parliament Presidency of the Republic Executive Council Republic Administration1990 1991 Parliament President GovernmentTito period Edit Vladimir Bakaric the first head of government of the SR Croatia The first post war head of state of the Socialist Republic of Croatia was Vladimir Nazor actually President of the Presidium of the Parliament of the People s Republic of Croatia who was during the war Chairman of the State Antifascist Council of the People s Liberation of Croatia ZAVNOH while the first head of government was Vladimir Bakaric Ironically even though communists promoted federalism post war Yugoslavia was strictly centralized 18 The main organ was the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Croatia from 1952 the League of Communists of Croatia made of around ten persons Its members were assigned to certain fields one controlled the armed forces another the development of the state a third the economy etc Ostensibly the system of government was representative democracy people would elect councillors and members of parliaments However the real power was in the hands of executive organs Representative organs the Parliament and various councils on local and district levels only served to give legitimacy to their decisions 19 The party that ruled the SR Croatia was the branch of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia the Communist Party of Croatia KPH Even though the party had a Croatian name its membership was only 57 Croats along with 43 Serb The majority of members were peasants and the majority was half educated 20 Soon after they gained power the Communists started to persecute former officials of the Independent State of Croatia in order to compromise them to the general public On 6 June 1946 the Supreme Court of the SR Croatia sentenced some of the leading officials of the NDH including Slavko Kvaternik Vladimir Kosak Miroslav Navratil Ivan Percevic Mehmed Alajbegovic Osman Kulenovic and others Communists also had a number of major and minor show trials in order to deal with the fascist regime of the NDH Also local leaders of the civic parties would often disappear without any witness 21 Communists not only cleansed the officials who were working for the NDH but also those who supported the Croatian Peasant Party and the Catholic Church 22 The only major civic party in Croatia the Croatian Republican Peasant Party was active only a few years after the election but as a satellite of the Communist Party The clash with the civic anti communist forces stimulated the Communist Party s centralism and authoritarianism 21 When he took power Tito knew that the greatest threat to the development of communism in Yugoslavia was nationalism Because of that the communists would crush even the slightest form of nationalism by repression The communists made the most effort to crush nationalism in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia and tried to suppress the hatred between Croats Serbs and Muslims but even so their greatest supporters in this process were local Serbs Soon the Serbs were overrepresented in the Croatian and Bosnian state and party leadership 18 After Tito s death Edit In 1980 Josip Broz Tito died Political and economic difficulties started to mount and the federal government began to crumble The federal government realised that it was unable to service the interest on its loans and started negotiations with the IMF that continued for years Public polemics in Croatia concerning the need to help poor and less developed regions became more frequent as Croatia and Slovenia contributed about 60 percent of those funds 23 The debt crisis together with soaring inflation forced the federal government to introduce measures such as the foreign currency law for earnings of export firms Ante Markovic a Bosnian Croat who was at the time the Croatian head of government said that Croatia would lose around 800 million because of that law 24 Markovic became the last head of government of Yugoslavia in 1989 and spent two years implementing various economic and political reforms His government s efforts were initially successful but ultimately they failed due to the incurable political instability of the SFRY Ethnic tensions were on the increase and would result in the demise of Yugoslavia The growing crisis in Kosovo the nationalist memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts the emergence of Slobodan Milosevic as the leader of Serbia and everything else that followed provoked a very negative reaction in Croatia The fifty year old rift was starting to resurface and the Croats increasingly began to show their own national feelings and express opposition towards the Belgrade regime On October 17 1989 the rock group Prljavo kazaliste held a major concert before almost 250 000 people in the central Zagreb city square In light of the changing political circumstances their song Mojoj majci To my mother where the songwriter hailed the mother in the song as the last rose of Croatia was taken to heart by the fans on the location and many more elsewhere because of the expressed patriotism On October 26 parliament declared All Saints Day November 1 a public holiday In January 1990 during the 14th Congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia the delegation of Serbia led by Milosevic insisted on replacing the 1974 constitutional policy that empowered the republics with a policy of one person one vote which would benefit the majority Serb population This caused first the Slovenian and then Croatian delegations led by Milan Kucan and Ivica Racan respectively to leave the Congress in protest and marked a culmination in the rift of the ruling party Ethnic Serbs who constituted 12 of the population of Croatia rejected the notion of separation from Yugoslavia Serb politicians feared the loss of influence they previously had through their membership of the League of Communists in Croatia that some Croats claimed was disproportionate Memories from the Second World War were evoked by the rhetoric coming from the Belgrade administration As Milosevic and his clique rode the wave of Serbian nationalism across Yugoslavia talking about battles to be fought for Serbdom emerging Croatian leader Franjo Tuđman reciprocated with talk about making Croatia a nation state The availability of mass media allowed for propaganda to be spread fast and spark jingoism and fear creating a war climate In February 1990 SR Croatia changed its constitutional system to a multi party system 25 In March 1991 the Yugoslav People s Army met with the Presidency of Yugoslavia an eight member council composed of representatives from six republics and two autonomous provinces in an attempt to get them to declare a state of emergency which would allow for the army to take control of the country Serbian and Serb dominated representatives Montenegro Vojvodina and Kosovo already in agreement with the army voted for the proposal but as representatives of Croatia Slovenia Macedonia and Bosnia voted against the plot failed The dying country had yet to see a few more Serb leadership s attempts to push the plan for centralizing the power in Belgrade but because of resistance in all other republics the crisis only deteriorated Transition to independence Edit Main article Independence of Croatia The 1990 Croatian parliamentary election was held on April 22 and May 6 1990 After the first multi party elections the creation of a constituent republic based on democratic institutions occurred After the first free elections in July 1990 the prefix socialist was dropped and thereafter Croatia was named the Republic of Croatia 26 Franjo Tuđman was elected president and his government embarked on a path toward the independence of Croatia Economy EditEconomic model and theory Edit The economy of the SFR Yugoslavia and thus of the Socialist Republic of Croatia was initially influenced by the Soviet Union As the Communist Party of Yugoslavia was a member of the Communist International Yugoslav communists thought that the Soviet way to socialism was the only option to create a socialist state In the early years of the SFR Yugoslavia Communist members suppressed critics towards the Soviet Union and harbored sympathies towards it 27 In the CPY it was generally thought that state ownership and centralism were the only ways to avoid economic breakdown and that without the state ownership and administrative control it would be impossible to accumulate vast resources material and human for economic development Since every undeveloped country needs vast resources in order to start developing and Yugoslavia was among them communists thought that this was the only way to save the economy of Yugoslavia Also their ideology included elimination of the private sector as they thought that such an economic system was historically wasteful 28 Economy during the war Edit The first process of nationalization started on 24 November 1944 when Yugoslav Partisans dispossessed their enemies of their assets The first victims of the confiscation were occupiers and war criminals However not long after the assets of 199 541 Germans the whole German minority including 68 781 ha of land were confiscated as well Until the end of the war the state controlled 55 of industry 70 of mining 90 of ferrous metallurgy and 100 of the oil industry 29 Renewal of economy Edit In the SR Croatia material damage and losses were high In the war the SR Croatia lost 298 000 people 7 8 of its total population Because of the 4 year partisan war bombings over exploitation of raw materials and agricultural resources and destruction of roads and industrial facilities the state entered into economic chaos The peasantry that supplied all the conflicted sides in the war was wasted and human losses were also high 30 The damage of industry in Yugoslavia was the worst in the whole of Europe while the SR Croatia was among the most damaged republics of Yugoslavia along with Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro 31 The communist authority needed to do something in order to prevent hunger disorder and chaos Yugoslavia lacked qualified workers so the economy s renewal was mostly based on mass volunteer work The recruitment for volunteer work was conducted with propaganda about a better communist future especially among members of Yugoslav partisans and youth Another segment of these labourers were those who feared persecution mainly opponents of the communist regime and Nazi collaborators They entered volunteer labour in order to escape persecution A third segment of the work force consisted of prisoners of war who worked the hardest jobs 30 The distribution of food and material needed for industry depended on fast renewal of damaged roads The Zagreb Belgrade railway had been in reconstruction day and night so the first train to travel this railway after the war did it already at the end of June 1945 Mine fields were also being cleared 30 Even though relations between the Western countries and Yugoslavia were tense significant help to the people of Yugoslavia came from the UNRRA an American aid agency formed as a branch of the United Nations They distributed food clothes and shoes which helped the communists avoid hunger Between 1945 and 1946 the UNRRA deployed 2 5 million tons of goods mostly food 30 worth US 415 million This amount was equal to twice the imports of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1938 or 135 of its tax revenues It is generally thought that UNRRA fed and clothed some 5 million people 32 Agrarian reform Edit Map showing the economic development of the Yugoslav republics in 1947 average development is 100 At the same time as the persecution of political enemies communist authorities conducted the Agrarian Reform 33 a reform made on 23 August 1945 29 This process included dispossession of wealthy citizens and peasants Agrarian Reform changed the ownership relations of agricultural properties Land that was above 35 acres was taken from its owners Nearly half of taken lands were transformed to agricultural areas state property while the other half was given to poor peasants This reform also included the colonization in the SR Croatia where people from the so called depressed areas moved to areas from which the Volksdeutsche had been expelled In the SR Croatia colonization occurred in Slavonia while colonists were the poor peasants mostly Croatian and Bosnian Serbs 29 The confiscation of property was also conducted people who were trading during the war were declared war profiteers and by this the state gained factories banks and large shops 33 The communists also introduced a new way of distribution of agricultural products In order to supply the people who lived in towns and cities they introduced the redemption of those products The policy of distribution was based on the idea that the working segment of society should have an advantage in quantity and diversity of goods over the non working parasitic segment This led to development of black markets and speculation 34 The next step in the implementation of the Agrarian Reform was nationalization of the large assets of the bourgeois segment of the population 33 On 28 April 1948 when small shops and the majority of crafts had been nationalized the private sector in the SR Croatia was liquidated to the end out of 5 395 private shops only 5 remained active This decision was a double edged sword while the poor segment of society was satisfied by it the large majority of the population was resistant and ready to revolt 29 Just like in the Soviet Union the state controlled the entire economy while free trade was forbidden in favour of central planning Because of this the state started rational distribution of necessities for living which were distributed among the population based on remittances while consumers gained a certain amount of certificates each month for buying a certain amount of certain goods including food clothes and shoes 33 In the spring of 1949 the state introduced high taxes on private farmer s economies which farmers were unable to pay This forced them to enter into the peasant labour unions formed based on the Soviet kolhozes In such a manner the state introduced forced collectivization of villages 35 This collectivization soon disappointed the poor peasants who got their land for free in the process of dispossession of wealthy peasants Even though the communists thought that collectivization would solve the problem with food on the contrary the collectivization created the so called Bread Crisis in 1949 29 The process of dispossession in Yugoslavia lasted from the middle of 1945 until the end of 1949 It was the fastest process of dispossession even compared to East European communist states 35 For this process the state needed a large number of officials who were members of the Communist Party receiving orders from the Politburo thus leaving the Yugoslav republic without any power in the economy The economy of one republic was depending on decisions made by the Politburo in Belgrade thus Yugoslavia become a strictly centralized state 36 Moreover the liquidation of the private sector cleansing of the state apparatus and high officials and their replacement by half educated partisans drastic reduction of the gap between payments of ministers and workers 3 1 and emigration and deaths of the bourgeois class led to the disappearance of the middle class in the social structure which had a negative effect on social life 37 Industrialization Edit Five Year Plan Edit Andrija Hebrang 4th Secretary of the Communist Party of Croatia a creator of the Five Year Plan Industrialization was the most significant process in the economic development of the SR Croatia as communists promoted industrialization as the main factor in fast development 31 After the process of renewal the process of industrialization and electrification started based on the Soviet model 38 The whole economy the creation of a system and the formulation of the strategy of development in the Five Year Plan was in the charge of Andrija Hebrang As President of the Economy Council and President of the Planning Commission Hebrang was in charge of all ministries that dealt with the economy Alongside Tito Edvard Kardelj and Aleksandar Rankovic he was the most influential person in Yugoslavia As a chief of the whole economy Hebrang finished his Five Year Plan in winter 1946 47 which was approved by the government in spring 1947 Because of the lack of knowledge the Plan copied the Soviet model The factories which were built faster were factories that were in the sector of heavy and military industry of which the most known in SR Croatia were Rade Koncar and Prvomajska 32 In the Five Year Plan Hebrang wanted to increase the industrial production by five times and agricultural production by 1 5 times increase the GDP per capita by 1 8 times and the national revenues by 1 8 times The plan also included the increase of qualified workers from 350 000 to 750 000 For the SR Croatia it was decided that its industrial production needed to be increased by 452 The fast development in industry required a high number of workers so from 461 000 workers in 1945 in 1949 there were 1 990 000 workers On 17 January 1947 Kardelj stated to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Croatia that Yugoslavia would be industrially stronger than Austria and Czechoslovakia Both Kardelj and Bakaric advocated development of light industry instead of Hebrang s idea for industry that would serve agriculture The Five Year Plan was indeed exaggerated this plan did not have qualified personnel market placement and capital even so the state continued with its implementation 39 All across the country the state built the sites and all projects of industrialization and electrification were made with propaganda that the population would have lower poverty and unemployment The unemployment was indeed reduced however new employees were not educated for their jobs so many objects were built slowly and many of them were not built at all Following the current views of the Communist Party the role of leading the economy was given to the directorate generals as a link between the ministries and the Party s leadership By their implementation the state gained even greater control over the economy The companies had their legal person however they did not have operational autonomy since they were as state organs under state control 38 Religion EditThe majority of residents were Roman Catholics and approximately 12 of the population were Orthodox Christians of the Serbian Patriarchy with a small number of other religions Due to strained relationships between the Holy See and communist Yugoslav officials no new Catholic bishops were appointed in the People s Republic of Croatia until 1960 This left the dioceses of Krizevci Đakovo Osijek Zadar Sibenik Split Makarska Dubrovnik Rijeka and Porec Pula without bishops for several years 40 From the mid 1950s there were only four seated bishops in Croatia in three dioceses Aloysius Stepinac Franjo Salis Seewiss Mihovil Pusic and Josip Srebrnic Many priests accused of collaboration with the Ustase and Axis during World War II were arrested after the end of World War II amid conflicts between the Catholic Church and the Allied Powers including the Archbishop of Zagreb Aloysius Stepinac Aloysius Stepinac was arrested on 16 September 1946 He was sentenced to sixteen years imprisonment but in December 1951 he was released to house arrest at his home in Krasic near Jastrebarsko where he died in 1960 41 Stepinac was made a cardinal in 1953 by Pope Pious XII Symbols Edit Flag used during World War II and early post war period 1943 47 Emblem used during World War II and early post war period 1943 47 Flag of SR Croatia 1945 1990 Emblem of SR Croatia 1947 1990 Flag used in 1990 before adoption of the current national flag Coat of arms used in 1990 before adoption of the current coat of armsSee also Edit Croatia portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Socialist Republic of Croatia Croatia History of Croatia Timeline of Croatian historyReferences Edit Drzavna obiljezja State symbols in Croatian Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs Croatia Retrieved 25 July 2012 Dolezal Dalibor 2016 Arnull Elaine Fox Darrell eds Cultural Perspectives on Youth Justice Connecting Theory Policy and International Practice New York City Springer p 87 ISBN 978 1 13743 397 8 POPULATION BY ETHNICITY 1971 2011 CENSUSES Croatian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 6 October 2021 Ustav Socijalisticke Republike Hrvatske 1974 Clan 138 Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Croatia 1974 Article 138 PDF in Croatian Narodne novine 22 February 1974 Retrieved 24 July 2012 Traditional translation one more accurate would be the Federated State of Croatia Cohen 1996 p 95 sfn error no target CITEREFCohen1996 help Bilandzic 1999 p 215 Matkovic 2003 p 257 Matkovic 2003 p 280 a b Matkovic 2003 p 281 Bilandzic 1999 p 208 a b Matkovic 2003 p 272 Matkovic 2003 p 274 Matkovic 2003 p 276 Matkovic 2003 p 277 Sabor July 25 1990 Odluka o proglasenju Amandmana LXIV do LXXV na Ustav Socijalisticke Republike Hrvatske Narodne novine in Croatian Retrieved 2011 12 27 Sabor December 22 1990 Ustav Republike Hrvatske Narodne novine in Croatian Retrieved 2011 12 27 a b Bilandzic 1999 p 218 Bilandzic 1999 p 219 Bilandzic p 235 sfn error no target CITEREFBilandzic help a b Bilandzic 1999 p 209 Bilandzic 1999 p 235 Goldstein 1999 p 190 Tanner 2001 p 207 Odluka o proglasenju Amandmana LIV do LXIII na Ustav Socijalisticke Republike Hrvatske Narodne novine in Croatian February 14 1990 Retrieved May 9 2009 Odluka o proglasenju Amandmana LXIV do LXXV na Ustav Socijalisticke Republike Hrvatske Narodne novine in Croatian July 25 1990 Retrieved April 27 2009 Bilandzic 1999 p 210 211 Bilandzic 1999 p 211 a b c d e Bilandzic 1999 p 212 a b c d Matkovic 2003 p 293 a b Bilandzic 1999 p 223 a b Bilandzic 1999 p 224 a b c d Matkovic 2003 p 286 Matkovic 2003 p 294 a b Matkovic 2003 p 286 287 Matkovic 2003 p 287 Bilandzic 1999 p 213 a b Matkovic 2003 p 295 Bilandzic 1999 p 225 Catholic Dioceses in Croatia Matkovic 2003 p 284 Sources EditTanner Marcus 2001 Croatia a nation forged in war 2nd ed New Haven London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09125 7 Goldstein Ivo 1999 Croatia A History London C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 1 85065 525 1 Matkovic Hrvoje 2003 Povijest Jugoslavije 1918 1991 2003 Zagreb Naklada P I P Pavicic ISBN 953 6308 46 0 Bilandzic Dusan 1999 Hrvatska moderna povijest in Croatian Golden marketing ISBN 953 6168 50 2 Coordinates 45 49 00 N 15 59 00 E 45 8167 N 15 9833 E 45 8167 15 9833 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Socialist Republic of Croatia amp oldid 1144563391, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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