Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T17:28:10.437Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Tending the “oasis of socialism.” Transnational political mobilization of Yugoslav economic emigrants in the FR Germany in the late 1960s and 1970s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Nikola Baković*
Affiliation:
Regional Historical Archives of Čačak, Čačak, Serbia
*

Abstract

The article examines the development of the Yugoslav state's policy of transnational political engagement of Yugoslav citizens on temporary work in the FR Germany during the late 1960s and 1970s. This politicization of labor migrations was shaped by the interplay of the internal turmoil in the Yugoslav federation and the conditions peculiar to West Germany of the time. The change of the state's perception of external migrations is being examined through the extension of the agitation apparatus of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia onto the territory of the FR Germany and the mobilization of economic emigrants against the “hostile” political emigrants residing in that country. The main goal of these measures was to maintain the emigrants' transnational links to their homeland and ensure that their political standing was kept in line with the official Yugoslav ideological tenets until the time of the prospective return migration cycle. The extraterritorial character of these measures, coupled with the specific position of Yugoslavia within the Cold War diplomacy, led to a peculiar ideological interplay and shifting web of cooperation and confrontation between various actors.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2014 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

Antonijević, Dragana. 2011. “Gastarbajter kao liminalno biće. Konceptualizacija kulturnog identiteta” [Gastarbeiter as a Liminal Being. Conceptualisation of the Cultural Identity]. Etnoantropološki problemi VI (4): 10131033.Google Scholar
Bajec, Milan. 1965. “Emigranti,” Borba, Belgrade, December 5, 5.Google Scholar
Baković, Nikola. 2011. “Hapšenje pripadnika terorističke organizacije Frakcija crvene armije u Jugoslaviji 1978. godine” [Arrest of the Members of the Red Army Faction in Yugoslavia in 1978]. Godišnjak za društvenu istoriju 18 (1): 3148. Accessed November 18, 2013. http://www.udi.rs/articles/n_bakovic_2011.pdf Google Scholar
Baučić, Ivo. 1973. Radnici u inozemstvu prema popisu stanovništva Jugoslavije 1971 [Yugoslav Workers Abroad According to the 1971 Yugoslav Census]. Zagreb: Institut za geografiju Sveučilišta.Google Scholar
Baučić, Ivo. 1974. Migracije i socijalno-ekonomski razvoj [Migrations and the Social-Economic Development]. Zagreb: Centar za istraživanje migracija.Google Scholar
Bošković, Milo. 1980. Antijugoslovenska fašistička emigracija [Anti-Yugoslav Fascist Emigration]. Belgrade: Sloboda.Google Scholar
Brihta, Ž. 1967. “Tko je ubio trojicu ustaša,” Vjesnik, Zagreb, October 29, 7.Google Scholar
Brunnbauer, Ulf, ed. 2009. Transnational Societies, Transterritorial Politics. Migrations in the (Post-) Yugoslav Region 19th-21st Century. Munich: R. Oldenbourg Verlag.Google Scholar
Cvetković, Srđan. 2009. “Političko-propagandno delovanje jugoslovenske političke emigracije na Zapadu 1945–1985” [Political-Propagandist Actions of Yugoslav Political Emigration in the West 1945–1985]. Hereticus VII (4): 4168.Google Scholar
Cvetković, Srdan. 2010. “Politička represija u Srbiji 1953–1985” [Political Repression in Serbia, 1953–1985]. PhD diss., University of Belgrade.Google Scholar
Dahinden, Janine, and Moret, Joelle. 2008. “Transnationale Aktivitäten serbischer und kosovarischer Migrantenorganisationen in der Schweiz” [Transnational Activities of Serbian and Kosovar Migrant Organisations in Switzerland]. Schweizerisches Jahrbuch für Entwicklungspolitik 27 (2): 213.Google Scholar
Daniel, Ondžej. 2007. “Gastarbajteri. Rethinking Yugoslav Economic Migrations Towards the European North-West Through Transnationalism and Popular Culture.” In Imagining Frontiers, Contesting Identities, edited by Ellis, Steven G. and Klusakova, Lud'a, 277302. Pisa: Pisa University Press.Google Scholar
Davidović, Milena. 1999. Deca stranih radnika. Druga generacija jugoslovenskih ekonomskih emigranata u zemljama Zapadne Evrope [Children of Foreign Workers. The Second Generation of Yugoslav Economic Emigrants in the Countries of Western Europe]. Belgrade: Institut društvenih nauka.Google Scholar
Dobrivojević, Ivana. 2007. “U potrazi za blagostanjem. Odlazak jugoslovenskih državljana na rad u zemlje zapadne Evrope 1960–1977” [In Search for Abundance. Labour Migrations of Yugoslav Citizens to Western Europe 1960–1977]. Istorija 20. veka 25 (2): 89101.Google Scholar
Dragišić, Petar. 2010. “Klubovi jugoslovenskih radnika u zapadnoj Evropi sedamdesetih godina” [Yugoslav Workers’ Clubs in Western Europe in the 1970s]. Tokovi istorije 1: 128138.Google Scholar
Fulbrook, Mary. 1992. The Divided Nation. A History of Germany 1918–1990. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Glamočak, Marina. 1997. Koncepcije Velike Hrvatske i Velike Srbije upolitičkoj emigraciji [Concepts of Greater Croatia and Greater Serbia Among the Political Emigrants]. Užice: Kulturno-prosvetna zajednica Užice.Google Scholar
Gustaf Strohm, Karl. 1971. “Störmanöver aus dem Untergrund,” Deutsche Zeitung - Christ und Welt, Hamburg, February 5, 6.Google Scholar
Haberl, Othmar Nikola. 1978. Die Abwanderung von Arbeitskräften aus Jugoslawien. Zur Problematik ihrer Auslandsbeschäftigung und Rückführung. Munich: Oldenbourg.Google Scholar
Hockenos, Paul. 2003. Homeland Calling. Exile Patriotism and Balkan Wars. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Ihlau, Olaf. 1972. “Mord und Terror im Exil,” Süddeutsche Zeitung, Munich, May 4, 10.Google Scholar
Ivanović, Vladimir. 2010. “Jugoslovenska koncepcija kulturno-zabavnog zivota jugoslovenskih radnika u Austriji i SR Nemačkoj” [Yugoslav Concept of Cultural and Leisure Activities of Yugoslav Workers in Austria and FR Germany]. Istorija 20. veka 28 (3): 125136.Google Scholar
Ivanović, Vladimir. 2012. Geburtstag pišeš normalno. Jugoslovenski gastarbajteri u SR Nemačkoj i Austriji 1965–1973 [Yugoslav Guest Workers in FR Germany and Austria 1965–1973]. Belgrade: Institut za savremenu istoriju.Google Scholar
Jandrić, Berislav. 2004. “Represivne mjere komunističkog režima prema hrvatskoj političkoj oporbi 1945–1975. Najznačajniji politički procesi” [Repressive Measures of the Communist Regime Against the Croatian Political Opposition 1945–1975. The Most Important Political Cases]. Paper presented at the conference Dijalog povjesničara-istoričara 9, Vršac, November 5-7. Accessed November 10, 2013. http://www.cpi.hr/download/links/hr/7323.pdf Google Scholar
Katunarić, Vjeran. 1978. Vanjske migracije i promjene u porodici [External Migrations and Changes in the Family]. Zagreb: Centar za istraživanje migracija.Google Scholar
Krstić, Marija. 2011. “Dijaspora i radnici na privremenom radu u inostranstvu: osnovni pojmovi” [Diaspora and Workers on Temporary Stay Abroad: Basic Concepts]. Etnoantropološki problemi VI(2): 295318.Google Scholar
Letić, Franjo. 1989. Društveni život vanjskih migranata [Social Life of the External Migrants]. Zagreb: NIRO “Radničke novine”.Google Scholar
Ličina, Đ. 1975. “Od podvodnih istraživanja do podzemnih viceva,” Vjesnik u srijedu, Zagreb, November 5, 5.Google Scholar
Marković, Predrag. 2005. “Gastarbajteri kao faktor modernizacije u Srbiji” [Gastarbeiter as the Factor of Modernisation in Serbia]. Istorija 20. veka 23 (2): 145163.Google Scholar
Mišović, Miloš. 1975. “Koreni terorizma,” NIN, Belgrade, April 6, 3235.Google Scholar
Pleterski, Janko, Kecić, Danilo, Vasić, Miroljub, Damjanović, Pero, Trgo, Fabiian, Morača, Pero, Petranović, Branko, Bilandžić, Dušan, and Stojanović, Stanislav. 1985. Istorija Saveza komunista Jugoslavije [History of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia]. Belgrade: Izdavački centar komunist/Narodna knjiga/Rad.Google Scholar
Tokić, Mate Nikola. 2009. “Landscapes of Conflict: Unity and Disunity in Post-Second World War Croatian Emigre Separatism.” European Review of History: Revue europeenne d'histoire 16 (5): 739753.Google Scholar
Tokić, Mate Nikola. 2012. “The End of ‘Historical-Ideological Bedazzlement': Cold War Politics and Emigre Croatian Separatist Violence, 1950–1980.” Social Science History 36 (3): 421445.Google Scholar
Zimmerman, William. 1987. Open Borders, Nonallignment and the Political Evolution of Yugoslavia. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar

Unpublished documents

Jugoslavije, Arhiv, Belgrade (AJ) - Collections 142 (Socialist Alliance of Working People of Yugoslavia), 467 (Federal Bureau for Employment Affairs), 591 (Federal Committee of Information) and 803 (Presidency of Yugoslavia).Google Scholar
Diplomatski arhiv Ministarstva inostranih poslova, Belgrade (DAMIP) - Political Archive, FR Germany.Google Scholar