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                        <forename>Jure</forename>
                        <surname>Gašparič</surname>
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                <author>
                    <persName>
                        <forename>Adéla</forename>
                        <surname>Gjuričová</surname>
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                <edition><date>2015-12-08</date></edition>
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                    <orgName xml:lang="sl">Inštitut za novejšo zgodovino</orgName>
                    <orgName xml:lang="en">Institute of Contemporary History</orgName>
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                        <addrLine>Kongresni trg 1</addrLine>
                        <addrLine>SI-1000 Ljubljana</addrLine>
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                <pubPlace>http://ojs.inz.si/pnz/article/view/133</pubPlace>
                <date>2015</date>
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                <title xml:lang="sl">Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino</title>
                <title xml:lang="en">Contributions to Contemporary History</title>
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                <biblScope unit="issue">3</biblScope>
                <idno type="ISSN">2463-7807</idno>
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                <p>Contributions to Contemporary History is one of the central Slovenian scientific
                    historiographic journals, dedicated to publishing articles from the field of
                    contemporary history (the 19th and 20th century).</p>
                <p>The journal is published three times per year in Slovenian and in the following
                    foreign languages: English, German, Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Italian, Slovak
                    and Czech. The articles are all published with abstracts in English and
                    Slovenian as well as summaries in English.</p>
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                <p>Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino je ena osrednjih slovenskih znanstvenih
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                    stoletje).</p>
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            <docAuthor>Jure Gašparič</docAuthor>
            <docAuthor>Adéla Gjuričová</docAuthor>
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                <head>Complex Parliaments in Transition: Central European Federations Facing Regime
                    Change</head>
                <p>"What is a socialist parliament?" This is a question that many political
                    historians may see as redundant or pointless. Parliaments in the one-party
                    socialist states in the Eastern Europe after World War II are frequently
                    shrugged off with an effortless explanation that they were merely façades of the
                    socialist regimes. Although this cannot be completely refuted, questions
                    nevertheless arise in the modern political historiography, calling for answers
                    stemming from the "neo-institutionalist" paradigm. What were the socialist
                    parliaments like? How were they organised? What was their outward appearance,
                    who were their members, how did they operate, what sorts of mechanisms guided
                    the socialist parliamentarism, and so on? At least a few members of the European
                    Information and Research Network on Parliamentary History (EuParl.net), which
                    brings together research organisations focusing on the history of
                    parliamentarism, deal with this phenomenon systematically. These efforts
                    resulted in the idea to organise a workshop where these researchers could
                    exchange their outlooks on socialist parliaments in their terminal stages, when
                    they were already undergoing a transformation into modern European parliaments. </p>
                <p>The workshop was organised by the Institute of Contemporary History in Ljubljana
                    in cooperation with the Czech Institute for Contemporary History (Ústav pro
                    soudobé dějiny AV ČR) from Prague and the Commission for the History of
                    Parliamentarianism and Political Parties (Kommission für Geschichte des
                    Parlamentarismus und der politischen Parteien) from Berlin. It took place on 16
                    October 2015 in Ljubljana at the Institute of Contemporary History, in the
                    building where in the past – until 1959 – the Socialist Parliament of the
                    Republic of Slovenia had held its sessions.</p>
                <p>The main idea and purpose of the gathering was to illustrate the transformation
                    of the parliaments and parliamentary systems in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
                    We did not want to define any detailed programme points – deliberately, because
                    we wanted the academic space for our workshop to remain as open as possible. </p>
                <p>In the introduction only a few common points were defined: The collapse of the
                    socialist regimes in 1989-1990 set off multifaceted processes of democratic
                    reforms as well as social and economic transformations. In some of the
                    East-Central European countries, these transformations were even more complex
                    due to their federal structure. Originally, the Yugoslav and Czechoslovak
                    federal systems had been intended to "engineer" a socialist equality of the
                    member nations. However, following the changes in the late 1980s, this basic
                    precondition ceased to exist and the various parts of the federations began to
                    express interests, use powers, build party systems and create ethnic
                    publics.</p>
                <p>The workshop explored some of these examples in detail, by comparing the
                    transformations of the parliamentary systems in three federal countries in the
                    early 1990s – in Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Germany. In Czechoslovakia, the
                    strong legal continuity between the socialist, revolutionary and post-socialist
                    era created fascinating blends of the three images of parliament. The German
                    case is described through the colonisation metaphor, which is interesting to
                    test on the example of the East German Volkskammer. In Yugoslavia, where the
                    already loose federal system kept getting looser, the individual federal
                    republics with their own socialist parliaments eventually became the only truly
                    important political actors in the process of system and state
                    disintegration.</p>
                <ab type="milestone" style="text-align:center">* * *</ab>
                <p>Already during the preparations for the workshop one of the ambitions of the
                    organisers was to collect some of the contributions and discussions as well as
                    the results of the research projects and publish them in a special topical issue
                    of our scholarly journal, thus making them available for the scrutiny or
                    challenge of the scholarly and general public. The ambition ultimately resulted
                    in this special issue of the Contributions to Contemporary History (Prispevki za
                    novejšo zgodovino) journal. The issue includes six scientific articles on the
                    topic of Complex Parliaments in Transition: Central European Federations Facing
                    Regime Change. It also includes two reports from the scientific conferences on
                    the history of parliamentarism (from the workshop Complex Parliaments in
                    Transition and the conference Parlamentarismuskritik und Antiparlamentarismus in
                    Europa, which took place in May 2015 in Berlin, also under the umbrella of the
                    EuParl.net) as well as the presentation of the posthumously published study on
                    the Austrian Parliament – the Vienna Reichsrat and Slovenians in the time of the
                    Habsburg Monarchy. </p>
                <p>All of these contributions undoubtedly demonstrate the complexity of the issue at
                    hand, as well as open and completely convincingly close numerous questions.
                    Besides the specific characteristics of the individual states that they focus on
                    (Czechoslovakia, Germany, Yugoslavia/Slovenia), these contributions also exhibit
                    differences in the intensity of research and approaches in the context of
                    individual national historiographies.</p>
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