Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
1 Josip Broz Tito, ibid., pp. 9–32, ‘Fifty Years of the Revolutionary Struggle of the Yugoslav Communists’.
2 Tito, ibid. pp. 1–19. Edvard Kardelj, ibid. p. 33–70, ‘Tito and the Communist Party of Yugoslavia’; Kiro Hadži Vasilev, ibid., pp. 209–28, ‘The Way to National Equality’.
3 Pero Morača, ibid., pp. 71–83, ‘Characteristic Features of the Yugoslav Revolution’; Bogdan Orcščnin, ibid., pp. 85–105, ‘From the Struggle for National liberation to the Contemporary and General Defence of the People’; Edvard Kardelj, ibid., pp. 33–70.
4 Ibid., p. 54.
5 Ibid., p. 75.
6 Stane Kavčič, ‘The Socio‐Economic Reform and its Significance’, ibid., pp. 176–207.
7 Stane Kavčić, ibid., p. 194.
8 Shoup, Vide Paul, Communism and the Jugoslav National Question, New York, 1968,Google Scholar Chapter V.
9 Kavčić, ibid., p, 197.
10 Kavčić, ibid., p. 206.
11 Srečko Bijelić, ibid., p. 238. ‘The Policy of the SKJ Regarding the Development of the Material Power of the SFRJ’.
12 Kavčić, ibid., p. 196.
13 Pribićević, Stoyan, Yugoslavia's Way, p. 120, Belgrade, 1958.Google Scholar
14 Najdan Pašić, ibid., p. 251, ‘The Role‐place of the League of Communists in the Self‐managed Transformation of the Political System’.
15 Tito, ibid., p. 24.
16 Pašić, ibid., p. 252.
17 Pasić, ibid., p. 255.
18 Miko Tripalo, ibid., pp. 337–50, ‘League of Communists and Youth’.
19 Quoted by Kavčić, ibid., p. 196.