Academic literature on the topic 'The Slovak National Uprising'

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Journal articles on the topic "The Slovak National Uprising"

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Syrný, Marek. "The Slovak National Uprising 1944." Journal of the Belarusian State University. History, no. 1 (January 31, 2020): 24–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.33581/2520-6338-2020-1-24-29.

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The article describes the Slovak National Uprising and its role in defeat of nazi Germany. It is shown that after the so-called Munich Treaty and creation of (First) Slovak Republic the majority of population was satisfied with state of affairs. The bombings of Bratislava by US Air Force in June 1944 caused increasing of local Resistance groups. This situation triggered off the decision of the Germans to occupy Slovakia. It is spoken in detail about course of the uprising. Author proposes the division of uprising into three phases depends on activities from both sides. Attention is given to the role of the USSR support to insurgents and reinforcing of Slovak Communist Party and other left parties. Despite of defeat of uprising this movement had positive consequences in politics, economy and culture of Slovakian territory. The author comes to conclusion that Slovak National Uprising was political victory which gave acceptable position towards President E. Beneš and Moscow.
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Żarna, Krzysztof. "Selected aspects of historical policy towards the Slovak National Uprising in the Slovak Republic." Rocznik Instytutu Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej 18, no. 2 (December 2020): 165–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.36874/riesw.2020.2.8.

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The Slovak Republic is a state that was formed as a result of the disintegration of the Czech and Slovak Federative Republic in 1993. Slovaks do not have rich traditions of their own statehood. For nearly a thousand years, the Slovak lands were within the sphere of influence of Hungary and they formed a common state with the Czechs, although the latter had a dominant position. The only period of owning one’s own statehood was during 1939- 1945, i.e. the functioning of the Slovak State / Slovak Republic. However, it was a country under the influence of the Third Reich. The article concerns selected aspects of the historical policy towards the Second World War appearing in the political discourse in the Slovak Republic. Issues that evoke extreme emotions have been analyzed: the Slovak National Uprising and the Slovak State / Slovak Republic. The activities of the People’s Party – Our Slovakia, which was the only one that refers to the tradition of the Slovak state in 1939-1945 and attacks the Slovak National Uprising were also analyzed. Transcripts were analyzed from meetings of the Slovak National Council, press articles and programs of individual political parties as well as statements of politicians with particular emphasis on the People’s Party – Our Slovakia. The article uses a comparative method and a case study.
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V. Parkhimovich. "The 75th Anniversary of the Slovak National Uprising." International Affairs 66, no. 001 (February 29, 2020): 213–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.21557/iaf.57888951.

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Švecova, Martina. "Regime Preferences in Communist Czechoslovakia and the Narrative on the Slovak National Uprising." Political Preferences, no. 27 (December 10, 2020): 79–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.31261/polpre.2020.27.79-94.

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Most of the participants in the Slovak National Uprising (SNP) were fighting for the ideals of democracy and freedom, for the defeat of fascism and Nazism and for the new Czechoslovak Republic with equal status for the Slovak people within it. They could not have foreseen that communist totalitarianism would be established after the war, one that would try to use the Uprising as a precursor for the socialist revolution (Fremal 2010: 359). The Communist Party, with the support of historians, utilised the legacy of the SNP to justify its political actions. Czechoslovak identity was also constructed through the image of the SNP, whose annual celebrations provided the communists with the opportunity to interpret the legacy of the SNP in various forms. This work deals with the way the communists interpreted the SNP in order to convince the public that this was a people's Uprising intended to lead to social equality and the eventual acceptance of communism in Czechoslovakia in the years 1947,1948 and 1954.
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Radonic, Ljiljana. "Slovak and Croatian invocation of Europe: the Museum of the Slovak National Uprising and the Jasenovac Memorial Museum." Nationalities Papers 42, no. 3 (May 2014): 489–507. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905992.2013.867935.

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Even though self-critical dealing with the past has not been an official criterion for joining the EU, the founding of the Task Force for International Cooperation on Holocaust Education, Remembrance, and Research and the Holocaust conference in Stockholm at the beginning of 2000 seem to have generated informal standards of confronting and exhibiting the Holocaust in the context of “Europeanization of Memory.” Comparative analysis shows that post-Communist museums dealing with the World War II period perform in the context of those informal standards. Both the Jasenovac Memorial Museum in Croatia and the Museum of the Slovak National Uprising in Banská Bystrica were founded in the Communist era and played an important role in supporting the founding myths of the two countries. Both were subjected to historical revisionism during the 1990s. In the current exhibitions from 2004/2006, both memorial museums stress being part of Europe and refer, to “international standards” of musealization, while the Jasenovac memorial claims to focus on “the individual victim.” But stressing the European dimension of resistance and the Holocaust obscures such key aspects as the civil war and the responsibility of the respective collaborating regime.
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Naxera, Vladimír, and Petr Krčál. "Oslavy výročí Slovenského národního povstání jako platforma pro vytváření obrazů nepřátel Slovenska." Czech Journal of International Relations 55, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 5–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.32422/mv.1640.

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The focus of this study lies in the instrumental use of history as a tool for the legitimization of political claims. Our paper is related to the Slovak National Uprising, which plays a crucial role in the national mythology of Slovakia. This role is a reason why the annual celebrations of this historical event are one of the most important political occasions in the country. Many politicians use the celebrations as an opportunity to highlight many political issues and address a broad audience. Using semi-participant observation, we analysed five anniversary celebrations of the event (2015–2019) and the securitization strategies inherited in the speeches of politicians at the celebrations. We showed that not only topics related to the legacy of the anti-fascist uprising (e.g. contemporary right-wing extremism) are securitized or serve as objects of the creation of moral panic during these events. Some other, unrelated actors/phenomena are securitized or labelled as a threat as well – especially immigration and the politics of the EU. This fact notwithstanding, the legacy of the SNU was always used for the legitimization of securitization/creation of moral panic.
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Škvarna, Dušan. "Polacy w słowackiej publicystyce i polityce od lat 30. do 60. XIX wieku." Prace Historyczne 147, no. 2 (2020): 211–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/20844069ph.20.012.12466.

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Poles in Slovak journalism and politics from the 1830s to the 1860s This paper sheds light on the perception of the Polish people, Polish politics, and their issues in Slovak journalism between 1830 and 1872. On the whole, the views were limited by the social opinions voiced by Slovak nationalists as well as by their interests and the general weakness of their National Movement. Slovak nationalists refused to accept political concepts that, on the one hand, supported the creation of nation states (by “large”nations such as Poland), and on the other hand, called for the assimilation of “small”nations living within them. This would spell the end of the Slavs and Romanians settled in Hungary, as Hungary would reform into one single national Hungarian state. Among all Austro-Slavs, the fear of “Magyarisation”contributed to the most intense and widespread Slavic solidarity and Russophilia in the Slovak-speaking environment. It also determined the difficult approach to the Polish issues. The Slovak nationalists sympathised with the Polish fate, however, at the same time, they had difficulties with accepting the Poland-Russia conflict. That is why we can find quite varied opinions of Poles and Polish issues. Idealising the Poles, Polonophilia, sympathising with Poles as regards their problems, careful and neutral views of those problems, efforts to limit the Poland-Russia conflict, and critical views of Poles were all entwined. For example, pro-Polish sympathies dominated in the Slovak National Movement in the 1830s, whereas in the 1840s the sympathies shifted towards Russia, despite the fact that some nationalists supported the Poles and their Uprising in Halych. The real Slovak-Polish co-operation can be seen particularly during the revolution in 1848–1849. Out of the Slovak political ideology emerged the Pan-Slavic work Slovanstvo a svet budúcnosti [Slavdom and the world of the future] by Ľ. Štúr, which combined the Slav perspective with the connections to Russia. The Polish issues were mainly present in the 1860s. During that time, the more conservative political wing, “Stará škola”[The Old School], was looking for support in the imperial Vienna, showing strong Russophilism and critical attitude to the Polish uprising. In contrast, the more liberal political line, “Nová škola”[The New School], striving for co-operation with Hungarian political parties, showed understanding for the Polish aversion and was critical of the imperial Russia. After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise, the Slovak politics and culture considerably weakened. The interest in glossing over the problems of the northern neighbour also declined. The Polish issues re-entered Slovak journalism again after the 1890s in connection with analysing new geo-political affairs on the continent and polarisation of the European superpowers.
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Naxera, Vladimír, and Petr Krčál. "“How to Sustain National Security”: A Case Study of the Celebrations of the Slovak National Uprising as a Securitization Platform." Social Sciences 9, no. 11 (October 30, 2020): 194. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci9110194.

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This paper focuses on the ways in which political actors make use of historical legacies to present their own determination to sustain their country’s national security. We use the example of the annual celebrations of the anniversary of the Slovak National Uprising (SNU) to demonstrate the ways in which similar celebrations can become a platform for political actors to express requests and address their audience. Using semi-participant observation, we have analyzed six years of these celebrations (2015–2020) and the securitizing strategies and moral panic creation strategies contained in the speeches of participating politicians. Our analysis shows that securitization is taking place, and labels of threat sources are being given not only to topics that are naturally linked to the celebrated event, but also topics that are in no way related to SNU. Despite this fact, politicians use the legitimacy of the event to manifest their own attempts at sustaining security.
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Porubský, Stefan. "Application and Misapplication of the Czechoslovak STP Cipher During WWII." Tatra Mountains Mathematical Publications 70, no. 1 (September 26, 2017): 41–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/tmmp-2017-0019.

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Abstract Lieutenant colonel Karol Cigáň (1921-2005), head of the cryptographic unit of the Czechoslovak Ministry of National Defence in the period 1949-1958 was after discharging from this position in Prague relocated to an insignificant and substandard command position at a district military administration in Slovakia. His cryptographic experience was of no use in his new position. To profit from his previous experience as a high qualified cryptographer he started to study the accessible literature and archive materials about the usage of the Czechoslovak cipher systems during the WWII. The result of this his activity were some manuscripts where he deciphered and analyzed some Czechoslovak military wireless telegrams. His critical analysis and his conclusions did not meet an understanding or a positive response of historians and were nor accepted for publication. He had no other chance as to send them to archives. Unfortunately only one (in two copies) and a collection of small notes survived. The aim of this paper is to make decisive technical parts of manuscript [K. Cigáň: Impacts of the decryption of the cipher system of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Defence in London from the years 1940-1945 on the resistance movement. Archive of the Slovak National Uprising, Banská Bystrica, Slovakia, Document collection (Fond) V, manuscript no. S36/90, 46 pp.] about the usage of the socalled STP cipher accessible. Thereby we complement the paper [Š. Porubský: STP cipher of the Czechoslovak in-exile Ministry of Defence in London during WWII, in: Proc. of EuroHCC’17, 3rd European Historical Ciphers Colloq., Smolenice Castle, Slovakia, 2017 (J. von zur Gathen et al., eds.), Slovak Univ. of Technology in Bratislava, 2017, pp. 47-66] where the part of this manuscript containing Cigáň’s method for solving STP cipher which he calls “mathematical” is published. To put Cigáň’s analysis and comment into their historical framework we briefly outline the history of Czechoslovak military intelligence activities with emphasis on their cryptological component.
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Onderco, Michal. "The provision of private goods and the emergence of armed rebellion: the case of the Slovak National Uprising 1944–1945." Journal of International Relations and Development 19, no. 1 (August 7, 2015): 76–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/jird.2015.30.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "The Slovak National Uprising"

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Orság, Michal. "SNP." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta výtvarných umění, 2014. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-232424.

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The aim of the thesis was to bring events after 1945, when there was a period of remembrance in the company , which served as a therapy , politics and aesthetics . Work on the memories gradually morphed into , among other things , to the monuments that act against collective oblivion . Arise place of remembrance , which relate to historical events and private stories . Partisan monuments fill in the country which they have to remind essentially absent . Again remembering you and gets to the surface again forgotten information that creating a logical connection form the structure . This structure is subject to change , which helped by rewriting and overlapping information in different layers of the structure . Neither art does not avoid the remembrance and forgetting , and creates a theme of a strategy , which is included rewriting . Media and individual override blank sheets in the past, currently , collecting and composing the mosaic , which allows you to create your own identity.
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O'Donnell, Stephen. "From Pittsburgh to Pressburg : the transatlantic Slovak national movement, 1880-1920." Thesis, University of Strathclyde, 2018. http://digitool.lib.strath.ac.uk:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=29442.

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Between 1870 and 1920, half a million Slovak-speaking migrants left the Kingdom of Hungary for the United States of America. They represented one fifth of the world’s Slovak-speaking population. During this mass, transatlantic Slovak migration, Slovak nationalism in Hungary was transformed from a fringe idea into a serious political goal. The resulting Slovak national movement helped create the First Czechoslovak Republic (1918-1938), a state whose mostly Czech leaders pledged to support Slovak national rights. The multilingual region known as ‘Upper Hungary’ from which Slovak-speakers had left was given a new, ethnically-based name: Slovakia, which was imagined as a national, territorial homeland for Slovak speakers, and still in existence today. This critical period of change in Slovak nationalist thought has yet to be properly understood. This is because scholarship on Slovak nationalism in the new world has been artificially separated from research into Slovak nationalism in the old country. Although the role played by the emerging Slovak American community in campaigning for a Czecho-Slovak state during the First World War has been recognised, the wider significance of Slovak American political institutions, fraternal organisations and the Slovak migrant press in shaping Slovak nationalist activism has not. Historians of the Slovak-American community, on the other hand, have yet to influence debates on Slovak political nationalism. By combining two historiographical traditions that largely talk past one another, this study uncovers the transatlantic Slovak national movement that formed between nationalist leaders in Upper Hungary and the migrant colony in the United States. Based on extensive research in Slovak and Slovak-American archives in both the USA and Slovakia, this dissertation demonstrates that a transatlantic Slovak political movement in the late nineteenth century brought about the creation of a Slovak national homeland in the twentieth.
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Hilde, Paal Sigurd. "Nationalism in post-Communist Slovakia and the Slovak nationalist diaspora (1989-1992)." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2003. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.273215.

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Halabrínová, Michaela. "International Organizations and Their National Branches: The Case of UNICEF and the Slovak National Committee for UNICEF." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2017. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-359805.

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Since its establishment, UNICEF has been providing development and humanitarian aid in various regions of the world. Firstly, the aid was given to regions damaged by the Second World War. Nowadays, the aid is given to regions hit by natural disasters, wars, famine or diseases. In 2016, UNICEF celebrated 70th anniversary of its existence. In order to maintain its worldwide scope of performance for such a long time, it created a top-bottom organizational structure, from which a top is represented by the headquarter composed of the Executive Board with member states, the Bureau and the Office of the Secretary of the Executive Board. The bottom is represented by field offices and the National Committees for UNICEF, which directly implement the programs and initiatives of UNICEF, and ensure fundraising activities. On the other hand, they provide the top with feedbacks about carried projects and actual situations from their countries. The linking part between the top and the bottom of the organizational structure are regional offices and external committees across UNICEF, such as the Division of Private Fundraising and Partnership (PFP). PFP also manages relationships between UNICEF and the National Committees for UNICEF, which are autonomous nongovernmental organizations. The relation between UNICEF and the National Committees for UNICEF offers a unique example of how an international organization can manage its work. The case-study of the Slovak Committee for UNICEF portrayed more specifically how UNICEF coordinates its work within its structures and why it is a unique example. Furthermore, the case-study focused on answering if and to what extend are the activities of the Slovak Committee for UNICEF influenced by the national environment with its specifics and conditions. From another perspective, it focused on answering if the Slovak Committee can apply its own approaches toward its activities or it must follow general approaches settled by UNICEF.
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Flores, Norma Lisa. "When Fear is Substituted for Reason: European and Western Government Policies Regarding National Security 1789-1919." Bowling Green State University / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1350932743.

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Koronczi, Karol, and Mitsuo Ezaki. "A World Link CGE Model Applied to the Economic Reform in the Slovak Republic and EU Enlargement." Graduate School of International Development, Nagoya University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/2237/7496.

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Karolina, Lendak-Kabok. "Status of Women from National Minorities in the Serbian Higher Education System – Focus on Women from the Hungarian National Minority." Phd thesis, Univerzitet u Novom Sadu, Asocijacija centara za interdisciplinarne i multidisciplinarne studije i istraživanja, 2019. https://www.cris.uns.ac.rs/record.jsf?recordId=110674&source=NDLTD&language=en.

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The primary objective of this research was to identify andanalyse the challenges faced by ethnic minority studentswhile studying and building an academic career in the highereducation system of Serbia. The secondary objective was toanalyse the unconscious and conscious gender biases towardsethnic minority women, when building their academic careersand in reaching decision-making position in academia. Thetertiary objective of was to raise awareness about theincreased demand for human resources in the technical fieldsand that therefore more women should be steered towards thestudying engineering.The research was conducted based on 2192 filled inquestionnaires and 45 semi-structured interviews. Theresearch results showed that language, intersecting withgender, ethnicity and class result in a new inequality concept.It was shown that women are under-represented in technicalfields, which has its roots in gender stereotypes. Finally, itwas shown that women are less motivated to reach higherpositions in the Serbian higher education system than men.The author proposes a set of policy recommendations forsolving/mitigating the identified challenges, e.g. deconstructionof gender stereotypes via improved teachingaids in elementary and high schools, optimised Serbianlanguage teaching to eliminate the language difficulty facedat the start of their higher education; as well as the foundingof an ethnic minority research centre, which would researchthe challenges faced by ethnic minority communities.
Primarni cilj istraživanja je identifikacija i i analiza preprekau sistemu visokog obrazovanja tokom studiranja i izgradnjekarijere u akademskoj zajednici žena iz nacionalnih zajednicasa posebnim osvrtom na žene iz mađarske nacionalnezajednice. Sekundarni cilj je analiza nesvesne i svesne rodnepristrasnosti prema ženama etničkih manjina u toku izgradnjeakademske karijere i pri dosezanju visokih pozicija unutarakademije. Tercijarni cilj istraživanja je podizanje svesti otome, kako je potražnja za ljudskim resursima na tržištu radau oblasti tehničkih nauka značajna i da je stoga potrebnousmeriti veći broj žena ka tim oblastima. Istraživanje jesprovedeno pomoću 2192 popunjena upitnika i 45 polustrukturiranaintervjua. Istraživanjem je utvrđeno da jezik,koji je u intersekciji sa rodom, nacionalnošću i klasom,rezultira novim konceptom nejednakosti. Takođe je dokazanoda su žene nedovoljno zastupljene u tehničkim oblastima, štoje najvećim delom moguće pripisati rodnim stereotipima.Konačno, utvrđeno je da su žene manje motivisane dadosegnu visoke pozicije od muškaraca u sistemu visokogškolstva. Autorka predlaže skup mera za rešavanje i/iliublažavanje identifikovanih izazova, npr. dekonstrukcijarodnih stereotipa pomoću unapređenih nastavnih materijala uosnovnim i srednjim školama, prilađen program učenjasrpskog jezika za učenike iz etničkih manjina sa ciljemizbegavanja jezičke barijere na početku studija; odnosnoosnivanje centra za istraživanje statusa i izazova zajednicaetničkih manjina.
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Jiříček, Jan. "Postavení Slovenské národní rady 1944-1948." Master's thesis, 2011. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-310996.

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This Thesis analyses the position of the Slovak National Council from 1944 through 1948 as a body that had acquired all legislative, executive and government powers after its revolutionary establishment in Slovakia. The Thesis also deals with the period preceding the constitution of the Slovak National Council in order to point out the historical reasons of establishment of this Slovak national authority in light of developing Czech-Slovak relationships from late 18th century to the Slovak National Uprising, after which the Slovak National Council had been established and taken the reins thereof afterwards. The Slovak National Council is considered in this Thesis a Slovak national authority which originated under the circumstances of the historical period as an expression of the Slovak nation's independence concurrently entering the anti-fascist and anti-nationalist struggle aimed at release from the factual German thraldom. Slovak National Council in 1944 through 1948 reflects the Slovak nation's position within the period common restoration of the Czechoslovak Republic and the Thesis analyses how the position had been deteriorating due to the following historical events, particularly due to power ambitions of the Soviet Union pursuing its sphere of influence in the Czechoslovak Republic mainly...
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Macháček, Michal. "Gustáv Husák. Politická biografie se zvláštním zřetelem k česko-slovenským vztahům ve 20. století." Doctoral thesis, 2017. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-371358.

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Bibliographic record: Michal MACHÁČEK: Gustáv Husák. A Political Biography with Special Emphasis on Czech-Slovak Relations in 20th Century, PhD. thesis, The Faculty of Arts at Charles University 2017, 476pp. [784 standard pages]. Abstract The dissertation thesis discusses public activities, thoughts and the political life of JUDr. Gustáv Husák, CSc. (1913-1991), who was involved in the Czech-Slovak public space for sixty years with a significant footprint even today. The text is based on a thorough research and is chronologically structured, intertwined with thematic areas, however an analytical approach prevails. The first chapter focuses on Husák's youth, the factors that led him to the communist movement, and his early activism. This is followed by a portrayal of the Husák's activities during the Second World War, his role in the resistance, participation in a propaganda trip to the Nazi conquered Ukraine, and his vision of Slovakia as a republic of the Soviet Union. His later involvement in the Slovak National Uprising provided the legitimacy of his later political career in the post-war era, when he successfully led the struggle for the communist monopoly of political power in Czechoslovakia and attempts to present the Communist Party of Slovakia as a national party. Next two chapters show the origins...
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Sharkey, Kaitlin Kelly. "Fighting Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula on all fronts : a U.S. counterterrorism strategy in Yemen." Thesis, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26237.

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The United States needs a long-term counterterrorism strategy in Yemen. Nearly three years in, the faltering Yemeni transition threatens to fall apart in the face of an economic crisis, ongoing internal conflict, and al Qaeda attacks. Unchecked, a failed Yemeni state will provide al Qaeda with a larger recruiting base and an expanded area for operations. To prevent this nightmare scenario, the United States should integrate military restructuring, political reform, and economic development policies into its greater strategy to counter al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). This report describes the dynamics of the 2011 Yemeni uprising, the subsequent political transition, and the simultaneous evolution of AQAP. The report then analyzes these phenomena in the context of U.S. national security policy to determine a long-term counterterrorism strategy in Yemen. To succeed in defeating AQAP and stabilizing Yemen, the U.S. government must engage with its Yemeni partners and regional actors; invest in Yemen's military restructuring, political transition, and economic reforms; and continue to attack AQAP through direct action operations and in tandem with Yemeni armed forces.
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Books on the topic "The Slovak National Uprising"

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Satinský, Július. Moji milí Slováci: Listy rodákom o nebezpečenstvách ktoré im hrozia. Bratislava: Vesna, 1991.

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Kartous, Peter. The state symbols of the Slovak Republic. Bratislava: Kubko Goral, 1997.

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A, Dobroli͡ubov N. The Indian national uprising of 1857: A contemporary Russian account. Calcutta, India: Nalanda Publications, Calcutta, India, 1988.

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Ďurica, Milan Stanislao. Národná identita a jej historický profil v slovenskej skutočnosti. Padova: CLEUP, 1989.

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Kramer, Mark. The Czech-Slovak rupture and European security. Providence, R.I: Center for Foreign Policy Development, Brown University, 1992.

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Baumgarten, R. Vladimir. The National Slovak Society: 100 year history, 1890-1990. [Pittsburgh, PA]: The Society, 1990.

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Rudinsky, Norma. Incipient feminists: Women writers in the Slovak national revival. Columbus, Ohio: Slavica Publishers, 1991.

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školstva, Slovakia Ministerstvo. National report on youth policy in the Slovak Republic. Bratislava: Ministry of Education of the Slovak Republic, 2005.

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C, Glatz Anton, ed. The art of Slovakia: Permanent exhibition of the Slovak National Gallery. Bratislava: The Gallery, 1995.

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Odsúdení na dohodu: Spoločné tisícročie Slovákov a Madʹarov. V Bratislave: Slovart, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "The Slovak National Uprising"

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Horák, Alexander, Lucia Gianitsová, Mária Šimková, Martin Šmotlák, and Radovan Garabík. "Slovak National Corpus." In Text, Speech and Dialogue, 89–93. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-30120-2_12.

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Rudinsky, Norma L. "National Antiheroes: Symbolism and Narrative Voice as Coded National Identity in Ol’ga Feldeková’s Veverica." In Modern Slovak Prose, 205–14. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-11288-3_18.

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Fudge, Thomas A. "National assembly at Čáslav." In Origins of the Hussite Uprising, 204–15. Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Routledge Medieval Translations: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003005964-11.

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Ensink, Titus, and Christoph Sauer. "Chapter 7. Commemorating the Warsaw Uprising of 1 August 1944." In Transforming National Holidays, 171–89. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.47.12ens.

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Garver, Bruce. "Václav Klofáč and the Czechoslovak National Socialist Party." In The Czech and Slovak Experience, 102–23. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22241-4_7.

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Bielicki, Alexander. "Chapter 9. Slovak national identity as articulated in the homilies of a religious holiday." In Transforming National Holidays, 213–29. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.47.14bie.

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Klukanová, Alena, and Pavel Liscak. "National Environmental Monitoring of the Slovak Republic - Part Geological Hazards." In Engineering Geology for Infrastructure Planning in Europe, 650–56. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-39918-6_72.

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Júdová, Elena. "Current Issues of Deciding Cross-border Succession Matters in the Slovak Republic." In Universal, Regional, National – Ways of the Development of Private International Law in 21st Century, 179–95. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9497-2019-9.

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The European Regulation no 650/2012 unified the determination of jurisdiction and applicable law in succession matters in the Member States of the European Union. At the same time, it underlined other issues that complicate decision making on cross-border succession in the Slovak Republic. One of the most striking is the resolution of the issue of settling the common property of spouses, which under Slovak procedural law, is exercised by a notary in succession proceedings. The Slovak Republic does not participate at the enhanced cooperation on cross-border matrimonial property regimes, so joining jurisdiction in these cases with succession proceedings is very complicated. The present article deals with this and some other issues which the fragmentation of EU private international law brings.
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Vašečka, Michal, and Viera Žúborová. "Diaspora Policies, Consular Services and Social Protection for Slovak Citizens Abroad." In IMISCOE Research Series, 427–39. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51245-3_25.

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Abstract This chapter provides an overview of Slovak diaspora policies with a focus on social protection. It shows that the country’s diaspora policies have focused on educational and cultural engagement of ethnically defined Slovak nationals residing abroad, with a goal of improving knowledge of the national culture and language of citizens abroad.
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Ondáš, Stanislav, Jozef Juhár, and Anton Čižmár. "Extracting Sentence Elements for the Natural Language Understanding Based on Slovak National Corpus." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 171–77. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25775-9_17.

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Conference papers on the topic "The Slovak National Uprising"

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Erdelyi, Jan. "LONG-TERM MONITORING OF THE SLOVAK NATIONAL UPRISING BRIDGE." In 17th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2017. Stef92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2017/22/s09.049.

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Kuzevicova, Zofia. "MAPPING OF TOURIST TRAILS IN NATIONAL PARK SLOVAK PARADISE." In SGEM2011 11th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference and EXPO. Stef92 Technology, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2011/s09.114.

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Cymbalak, D., F. Jakab, M. Michalko, R. Vapenik, J. Turna, L. Bilsky, and J. Kovacova. "Effective collaborative environment with live broadcasts using Slovak National telepresence infrastructure." In 2017 15th International Conference on Emerging eLearning Technologies and Applications (ICETA). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iceta.2017.8102473.

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Bosak, Martin. "SLOVAK NATIONAL ACTIVITIES IN AMERICA AT THE BEGINNING OF 20TH CENTURY." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b31/s10.074.

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Mojzis, J., P. Krammer, M. Kvassay, I. Budinska, L. Hluchy, and M. Jurkovic. "Crawling and Analysis of Online Discussions in Major Slovak National Newspapers." In 2018 IEEE 22nd International Conference on Intelligent Engineering Systems (INES). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ines.2018.8523873.

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Trnka, Marian. "REFORM OF THE NATIONAL ISCED 1 CURRICULUM AS PERCEIVED BY SLOVAK TEACHERS." In 2nd International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conference on Social Sciences and Arts SGEM2015. Stef92 Technology, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2015/b12/s3.105.

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Balco, Peter, Peter Linhardt, and Martina Drahosova. "The e-health solution in Slovak Republic: Cloud concept for centralised national solution." In 2017 IEEE International Symposium on Signal Processing and Information Technology (ISSPIT). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/isspit.2017.8388682.

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Kovacik, Branislav. "THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE SLOVAK NATIONAL COUNCIL TO THE INDEPENDENT SLOVAKIA WITHIN HISTORICAL FRAMEWORK." In 5th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on SOCIAL SCIENCES and ARTS SGEM2018. STEF92 Technology, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2018/1.2/s01.035.

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Jakab, F., D. Cymbalak, R. Vapenik, P. Hrcka, and J. Kovacova. "Technical Challenges and Vision of Slovak National Telepresence Infrastructure during the COVID-19 Pandemic." In 2020 18th International Conference on Emerging eLearning Technologies and Applications (ICETA). IEEE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iceta51985.2020.9379151.

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Hrnčiar, Michal, and Jaroslav Kompan. "NEW APPROACHES TO THE LEADERS EDUCATION FOR NATIONAL CRISIS MANAGEMENT IN THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC." In 13th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies. IATED, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/edulearn.2021.1076.

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Reports on the topic "The Slovak National Uprising"

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Walsh, Alex. The Contentious Politics of Tunisia’s Natural Resource Management and the Prospects of the Renewable Energy Transition. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.048.

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For many decades in Tunisia, there has been a robust link between natural resource management and contentious national and local politics. These disputes manifest in the form of protests, sit-ins, the disruption of production and distribution and legal suits on the one hand, and corporate and government response using coercive and concessionary measures on the other. Residents of resource-rich areas and their allies protest the inequitable distribution of their local natural wealth and the degradation of their health, land, water, soil and air. They contest a dynamic that tends to bring greater benefit to Tunisia’s coastal metropolitan areas. Natural resource exploitation is also a source of livelihoods and the contentious politics around them have, at times, led to somewhat more equitable relationships. The most important actors in these contentious politics include citizens, activists, local NGOs, local and national government, international commercial interests, international NGOs and multilateral organisations. These politics fit into wider and very longstanding patterns of wealth distribution in Tunisia and were part of the popular alienation that drove the uprising of 2011. In many ways, the dynamic of the contentious politics is fundamentally unchanged since prior to the uprising and protests have taken place within the same month of writing of this paper. Looking onto this scene, commentators use the frame of margins versus centre (‘marginalization’), and also apply the lens of labour versus capital. If this latter lens is applied, not only is there continuity from prior to 2011, there is continuity with the colonial era when natural resource extraction was first industrialised and internationalised. In these ways, the management of Tunisia’s natural wealth is a significant part of the country’s serious political and economic challenges, making it a major factor in the street politics unfolding at the time of writing.
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