Serbia - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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Minority groups speak their own languages, such as Albanian and Hungarian.
Bosniaks generally speak Bosnian and write it with the Latin alphabet.
Serbs are by tradition Orthodox Christians.
The Roman Catholic and Protestant churches also have adherents in Serbia.
Most of the ethnic Albanians of Kosovo areSunni Muslims ( see Sunni Islam), as are the Bosniaks of the Sandžak region.
Bosniaks are descendants of Slavs who converted to Islam in the 15th and 16th centuries.
B Education
The leading institutions of higher learning in Serbia are the University of Belgrade, founded in 1863, and the universities of Kragujevac, Novi Sad, Niš, and Priština.Higher education in Serbia was crippled in 1998 when the Serbian parliament adopted a law that placed all universities under direct control of the government.
Thisseverely compromised academic freedom, and many of the most distinguished faculty members were fired.
However, following the fall of the regime of SlobodanMilošević in late 2000, Serbian universities regained much of their traditional autonomy.
Since that time they have worked to overcome the damage caused by theMiloševi ć regime and by international sanctions against Serbia in the 1990s.
Schooling was particularly difficult for ethnic Albanians after 1990, when the Serbian authorities closed schools in Kosovo that used a curriculum oriented toward Albania,rather than Serbia’s uniform state curriculum.
The University of Priština, in Kosovo, did not operate normally from 1990 to 2000, since most of its facultymembers—who were ethnic Albanians—were dismissed by the Serbian authorities and almost all of the ethnic Albanian students quit or were expelled.
KosovarAlbanians set up an underground school system in private homes and other locations, but education for Kosovar Albanian children clearly suffered.
Since theestablishment of autonomous provincial authority in Kosovo in 1999, the Kosovo education system has undergone reconstruction at all levels.
The University of Prištinahas since reopened as an Albanian university.
IV CULTURE OF SERBIA
The Orthodox Church had a major influence on the early development of the arts of Serbia.
Serbia was once part of the Byzantine Empire, for which OrthodoxChristianity was the state religion, and Byzantine influences appear in the country’s many beautiful Orthodox monasteries, such as De čani, Studenica, and Gra čanica,which contain magnificent frescoes and icons.
These works demonstrate the originality and brilliance of Serbian religious art and architecture prior to the region’sconquest by the Ottoman Empire in the 15th century.
A Art and Literature
Western artistic movements began influencing artists and architects in Serbia during 19th and 20th centuries.
Religious art was officially discouraged after the formerYugoslavia emerged from World War II in 1945 as a communist state.
Socialist realism became the predominant cultural force during the early communist period, butstrict communist ideology began to be abandoned in the late 1940s.
Nationalist movements in the 19th century inspired the first major works of literature.
Prominent Serbian writers of the 20th century included Isidora Sekuli ć and MilošCrnjanski.
Serbian novelist Dobrica Ćosi ć’s A Time of Death (1972-1979), dealing with World War I (1914-1918) in Serbia, was well received internationally.
Serbian writer and literary historian Milorad Pavi ć authored the international bestseller Dictionary of the Khazars (1984).
See also Yugoslav Literature.
B Music and Film
In the first half of the 19th century, Serbian philologist Vuk Karadži ć collected and published folk songs, epics, and other elements of Serbian oral traditions, whichbecame well known throughout Europe.
Folk songs, both traditional and new, continue to be an important aspect of Serbian culture.
Serbia has a lively contemporary music industry.
A type of Serbian neofolk music is popular among rural people and workers.
Serbian rock groups are popular andcreative.
After 1990 many rock musicians became active in protests against the wars and against the Serbian government.
Old Serbian church music has been revived,largely by the tenor Pavle Aksentijevi ć.
Serbian filmmaker Dušan Makavejev received international recognition for his films Innocence Unprotected (1968) and W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism (1971).
Director Emir Kusturica, a longtime resident of Belgrade who was born in Sarajevo, Bosnia, earned an Academy Award nomination for best foreign film for When Father Was Away on Business (1984).
Kusturica won international awards for his films Time of the Gypsies (1989), Underground (1995), and Black Cat, White Cat (1998).
V ECONOMY OF SERBIA
The wars of Yugoslav succession from 1991 to 1995, and the ensuing conflict in Kosovo in the late 1990s, harmed the Serbian economy in a number of ways.
Sanctionsimposed on the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) beginning in 1992 crippled Serbia’s foreign trade.
Serbia’s economy was also damaged because large numbers ofdraft-age men, intellectuals, and artists fled after the wars began, and because much of the republic’s economic resources were diverted to the military.
The UnitedNations (UN) lifted most of the sanctions in 1996, and all other sanctions were lifted in 2000 and 2001.
The breakup of the union between Serbia and Montenegro in2006 had little real impact on either economy as they had already maintained separate economies.
The Serbian economy is based on a mixture of agricultural and industrial production.
The most important agricultural area is in Vojvodina.
Major crops include wheat,corn, sugar beets, hemp, flax, and fruit.
Cattle, sheep, and pigs are also raised.
Formerly one of the chief sources of copper in Europe, Serbia’s mining andmanufacturing industries suffered in the economic decline, and many factories closed.
High inflation and unemployment levels also plagued the economy.
The banking system was reorganized in 2001 to mobilize funds for the reconstruction of the economy.
The currency of Serbia is the dinar. In Kosovo both the dinar and the euro (the currency of the European Union) are used.
VI GOVERNMENT OF SERBIA
Serbia is governed under a constitution adopted in 2006.
The 2006 constitution replaced the one of 1990, created when Serbia was still part of Yugoslavia.
The 1990constitution had formally stripped the provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina of their autonomous status and also laid the groundwork for multiparty elections.
(Since theend of the NATO air war against the FRY in 1999, Kosovo has been administered by the UN.)
With respect to Serbia’s union with Montenegro, a constitutional charter was adopted in February 2003 that gave virtual independence to the constituent republics andchanged the name of the FRY to Serbia and Montenegro.
The charter permitted each member republic to call a referendum on independence after three years.
In May2006 the people of Montenegro voted in favor of independence.
In June the shared central government was dissolved and the two republics became independentnations.
In October 2006 Serbian voters approved a new constitution formalizing Serbia’s status as an independent nation.
The document also declared Serbia’ssovereignty over Kosovo, preempting ongoing UN-led negotiations to determine the status of the province..
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