BREAKUP OF YUGOSLAVIA. Former Yugoslavia Creation Yugoslavia was first formed as a kingdom in 1918 and then recreated as a Socialist state in 1945 after.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The BREAK-UP of YUGOSLAVIA. Yugoslavia From its creation in 1918 until the country broke apart in the early 1990s, Yugoslavia was a multinational state.
Advertisements

Yugoslavia: The Break Up Gunnar & Megan. What lies at the root of this conflict? ❖ The five republics of Yugoslavia --Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia,
Can Bosnia be put back together again? World Regional Georaphy Afton’s Class July 15, 2009.
Bosnian Genocide. Perpetrators When: April December 1995 Who: Bosnian Serbs, Slobodan Milosevic Slobodan Milosevic ( ) President of Serbia.
D. Central Europe Two tiers of countries following end of communism –New EU members (Poland, Czech Rep., Hungary, Slovakia, Slovenia) Democracy, market.
You will need laptops Today’s Class Objectives: 1.Describe the issue of human rights identified with the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. 2.Using your.
Daniet Moges POLI 388-Interantional Conflict and Cooperation May 12, 2010 The Former Yugoslavia crises ( ) Bosnia’s Genocide.
Civil War in the Former Yugoslavia After the Cold War ended Croatia, Slovenia, Macedonia and Bosnia broke away from Yugoslavia (often known as Serbia)
Civil War in Yugoslavia  B B B Break-up EEEEthnic Cleansing CCCCrisis in Kosovo.
The BREAK-UP of YUGOSLAVIA
Ethnic Cleansing in the Former Yugoslavia. Background Yugoslavia was formed after WWI and contained six different groups of people; Serbs, Croats, Muslims,
Balkans The Powder Keg of Europe Ed Schreiber Denver, Colorado
The Disintegration of. Political Map of Serbia Ethnic Map of former Yugoslavia.
Former Yugoslavia: Genocide in the 1990’s
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Modern Conflicts Divide Nations.
Balkanization.
Yugoslavia “The Country of the Southern-Slavs”. 1. Name the seven current countries that made up Yugoslavia. Interactive Notebook: Assignment #1.
Civil War in Yugoslavia. Bosnia Background – Yugoslavia was formed at Versailles in Under control of Marshall Tito after WWII until the early 1980s.
Seven Balkan nations which all used to be part of Yugoslavia: – Bosnia & Herzegovina – Croatia – Kosovo – Macedonia – Montenegro – Serbia – Slovenia.
Bosnia Humanitarian Intervention Presented By: Doyle Thibert, Sharon Aiger and Mary Winter.
 Eastern Countries  Albania  Bosnia & Herzegovina  Bulgaria  Croatia  Czech Republic  Hungary  Macedonia  Poland  Romania  Slovakia  Slovenia.
Warm-up 1/14/2015 Find your map notes from yesterday. What would you do if someone shot someone in your family? What would you do if someone was forcing.
Yugoslavia & The Balkans Scarier than Lions, Tigers and Bears… OH MY!!!
The Powder Keg of Europe
Yugoslavia and the Balkans The area Russia left behind.
Introduction to Yugoslavia HOA 12 HL Unit 6 Jennifer Dikes.
East Central Europe: The Former Yugoslavia A case study in political and cultural geography.
World Geography Mrs. Curtiss.  After WW I, Austro-Hungarian Empire broken up  Unified into a multi-ethnic state based on linguistic groups  Ethnic.
Civil War in Yugoslavia  B B B Break-up EEEEthnic Cleansing CCCCrisis in Kosovo.
Genocide in Yugoslavia
Ethnic Tensions in Yugoslavia. The Background: Yugoslavia Before WWI: Many E. European countries under Austrian- Hungarian rule. Austria-Hungary defeated.
Yugoslavia 1. Countries 2. History Overview. Yugoslavian Countries The following Countries were formerly a part of Yugoslavia: The following Countries.
Genocide in Yugoslavia
The Break-Up of Yugoslavia Again….nationalism destroys empires!!!
Bellringer Get out your Pollution articles and map
The Ottoman Turks invaded the region at the end of the 14th century and the Turkish rule lasted for some 500 years. The Austro-Hungarian empire.
The Cold War Begins Conflicts Divide Nations Section 1 Explain the complex causes of ethnic and religious conflicts. Describe how war ravaged Chechnya.
Key Issue #4: What Is Ethnic Cleansing? Ethnic cleansing (ethnic purification) – forced removal of an ethnic group by another from a territory; the goal.
The basis for this presentation is a BBC slide show
ex/tracks/radio/mario-ft.- gucci-mane-sean-garrett- break-up/
The Breakup of Yugoslavia
Breakup of Yugoslovia By: Ryan Matzkow. Background First formed as a kingdom in 1918 Created a socialist state in 1945 after Axis Powers were defeated.
The Fall of Yugoslavia. Peaceful Coexistence Assimilation.  Assimilation occurs when a minority group adopts the patterns and norms of a more powerful.
Where did Yugoslavia go?. 1. Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina 2. Socialist Republic of Croatia 3. Socialist Republic of Macedonia 4. Socialist.
YUGOSLAVIA. After World War II Communist Independent from Soviet Union Non-aligned nation Led by Josip Tito.
Nation-states vs Nationless States
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Modern Conflicts Divide Nations.
The Creation and Collapse of Yugoslavia The Creation and Collapse of Yugoslavia.
Ethnic Tensions in Yugoslavia
Nation-states vs Nationless States
Civil War and the Collapse of Yugoslavia
Balkan Peninsula Historically controlled by:
Chapter 20 Regional Conflicts Section 1: Modern Conflicts Divide Nations Objectives: Explain the complex causes of ethnic and religious conflicts. Describe.
New Balkan Nations Seven Balkan nations which all used to be part of Yugoslavia: Bosnia & Herzegovina Croatia Kosovo Macedonia Montenegro Serbia Slovenia.
Objectives Explain the complex causes of ethnic and religious conflicts. Describe how war ravaged Chechnya. Understand how Yugoslavia broke apart.
Revolutions in Eastern Europe
Nation-states vs Nationless States
The Disintegration of Yugoslavia
Get out stuff for notes History of Yugoslavia Notes
Yugoslavia World History 3219 May 2017.
The Former Yugoslavia Must copy what is in blue! Location of
‘Some Damned Thing in the Balkans’
The BREAK-UP of YUGOSLAVIA
Mass Graves Uncovered Where the Men From Srebrenica Ended Up
Genocide in Yugoslavia
Crisis in the Balkans Balkanization—to beak up into small, mutually-warring factions.
Ethnic Tensions in Yugoslavia
Genocide in Yugoslavia
Civil War in Yugoslavia
Did Nationalism Unite or Divide the Regions of the Balkan Peninsula?
Presentation transcript:

BREAKUP OF YUGOSLAVIA

Former Yugoslavia

Creation Yugoslavia was first formed as a kingdom in 1918 and then recreated as a Socialist state in 1945 after the Axis powers were defeated in World War II. The constitution established six constituent republics in the federation: Bosnia-Hercegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia. Serbia also had two autonomous provinces: Kosovo and Vojvodina.

Background Info Serbia – mainly Orthodox Christian population Croatia – mainly Catholic population Bosnia – mixed Muslim, Serb, and Croat population

Timeline Josip Tito ruled as a charismatic leader of Yugoslavia employing his own brand of communism (separate from Stalin’s)

Timeline Yugoslavia had a rotating Presidency headed by a leader of one of the regions Late 1980s - Slobodan Milosevic came to power pushing for Serbian nationalism

Slovene/Catholic 91% Croat/Catholic 3% Serb/E Ortho 2% Croat/Catholic 78% Serb/E Ortho 12% Serb/ E Ortho 63% Montenegrin/ E Ortho 6% Albanian/Muslim 14% Hungarian/Catholic 4% Muslims (43.7%) Croats/Catholic (17.3%) Serbs/E Ortho (31.4 %) 66% Macedonian/E Ortho 23% Albanian/Muslim 2% Serb/E Ortho 4% Turk/Muslim Patterns of Ethnic Settlement Facilitated the Conflict and Break-up Bosnia: 40% of urban couples ethnically mixed

Slovenia broke away from Yugo. (short war)

Croatia Croatia broke away from Yugo. (bloody war)

Bosnia-Herzegovina Bosnia-Herzegovina declared independence from Yugo.

Ethnic Cleansing Serbs began a campaign of ethnic cleansing against mainly Bosnian Muslims (concentration camps, mass murder, mass rapes – to eradicate Muslims from parts of Bosnia)

Timeline Dayton Accords – tenuous peace agreement for Bosnia

Serbia and Montenegro Yugoslavia disappeared from the map of Europe, after 83 years of existence, to be replaced by a looser union called simply Serbia and Montenegro, after the two remaining republics.

Montenegro Declared independence in 2006

Kosovo In 2008 declared itself an independent state. Serbia and a number of other countries do not recognize the secession of Kosovo and consider it a UN-governed entity within its sovereign territory.