Call for Papers: (Re)Thinking Yugoslav Internationalism –
Cold War global entanglements and their legacies
Deadline: 28 February 2016.
30 September – 1 October 2016
Graz, Austria
Centre for Southeast European Studies, University of Graz and the University of Exeter
For more than forty years, Yugoslavia was one of the most internationalist and outward looking of all
socialist countries in Europe, playing leading roles in various trans-national initiatives – principally as
central participant within the Non-Aligned Movement – that sought to remake existing geopolitical
hierarchies and rethink international relations. Both moral and pragmatic motives often overlapped
in its efforts to enhance cooperation between developing nations, propagate peaceful coexistence in
a divided world and pioneer a specific non-orthodox form of socialism.
Although the disintegration of socialist Yugoslavia has received extensive treatment across a range
of disciplines, the end of Yugoslavia’s global role and the impacts this had both at home and abroad,
have received little attention. Coinciding with the 55th anniversary of the Belgrade summit and the
foundation of the Non-Aligned Movement, this conference seeks to open up a range of questions
relating to the wealth of diplomatic, economic, intellectual and cultural encounters and exchange
between 1945 – 1990, both within the Non-Aligned Movement, across the socialist world and with
the developed countries. It would map the history of Yugoslavia’s global engagements not only as a
subject associated with political/diplomatic history, but also as a broader societal and cultural
project. Important witnesses involved in those exchanges and alliances will also be invited to share
their experiences.
We welcome papers from different disciplines and from diverse perspectives, whether dealing with
aspects of Cold War international cooperation, development, Yugoslavia’s global role, or the ‘global’
Cold War from the perspective of the developing world and the ‘global South’. We particularly
encourage proposals which would reflect on:
– the roots of Yugoslav internationalism and how it was understood in cultural/economic/social as
well as political/diplomatic terms;
– the contours of Yugoslav diplomacy and the ways Yugoslav elites conceptualised their global
role;
– the role of Yugoslavia in the United Nations, its agencies and other international organisations
as the fora for global encounters and in particular the attempts at tackling global inequality and
alternative development;
– the relationship between Yugoslavia, the different liberation movements and the newly
emerging independent nations in the ‘global South’ (including cultural diplomacy, labour
migration, individual travel);
– the realities and challenges of foreign trade, investment construction and economic
cooperation;
– the ways international engagements reshaped aspects of political, economic or cultural life back
in Yugoslavia;
– the role and significance of the Non-Aligned Movement during the Cold War and today;
– the international impact of the end of Yugoslavia and the collapse of her global role;
– the legacies and new understandings of Yugoslavia’s global role.
Abstracts of 300-500 words, together with an accompanying short biographical note should be
submitted to Natalie Taylor (N.H.Taylor@exeter.ac.uk) by 28 February 2016.
Funding opportunities for travel and accommodation are available, but we ask that potential
contributors also explore funding opportunities at their home institutions.