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Articles by Stefano Lusa

Zoran Janković (left) and Gregor Virant (right)

Slovenia, Janša can wait

Stefano Lusa | 21 October 2011 ita

After the centre-left government led by Borut Pahor resigned, Slovenia’s political destiny appeared to be doomed to a turn to the right. Former Prime Minister Janez Janša was considered likely to win the next early elections, due to take place on 4 December. However, things have recently taken a dramatic turn



The partisan's Euro

Slovenia: the partisan's Euro

Koper | Stefano Lusa | 12 April 2011 ita

The five point star has returned to European coins over twenty years after the fall of the Berlin wall. Slovenia has just issued a million coins for two euro dedicated to a legendary partisan commander, Franc Rozman



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The Greek crisis seen from Slovenia: the “Southern Brothers” syndrome

Koper | Stefano Lusa | 19 May 2010 ita

For decades, Slovenians looked with growing bother at the aids destined to the “less developed areas” of Yugoslavia, often considering them an unjust squander intended for the privileged and the lazy. Today, with the Greek crisis, in Ljubljana the syndrome of the “Southern brothers” seems to have reappeared, but this time in an EU context



Tito: the game has been cancelled

Tito: the game has been cancelled

Koper | Stefano Lusa | 4 May 2010 ita

Months of obsessive treatment, because in a Yugoslavia struck by a deep-crisis, Tito should have not died. Instead, in the afternoon of May 4th 1980, the inevitable happened. Thirty years since the death of the Marshal, thirty years since the beginning of the end of Yugoslavia



From soldiers to caregivers

From soldiers to caregivers

Stefano Lusa | 2 March 2010 ita

The Slovenian weekly newspaper Mladina has proposed the following: abolish the army and transform soldiers into either caregivers for the elderly or emergency management staff. More than five thousand people have already signed a petition in support of the proposal and the debate is heating up. Insight from our correspondent



Slovenia: 1989 or 1992?

Slovenia: 1989 or 1992?

Koper | Stefano Lusa | 28 December 2009 ita

In Slovenia, the period from the second half of the ‘80s until the country's independence in 1992 saw the beginning of the Yugoslav crisis, the emergence of nationalism, and Ljubljana’s final separation from Belgrade. A contribution to the dossier "The long lasting ’89"



Longing for Mitteleuropa: the Slovenian 1989

Longing for Mitteleuropa: the Slovenian 1989

Capodistria | Stefano Lusa | 12 November 2009 ita

From architecture to literature, from language to skiing, a look at Slovenia - the country that entered 1989 gradually turning its back on the Balkans. A contribution to our dossier The long lasting '89.



Punk save Ljubljana

Punk save Ljubljana

Capodistria | Stefano Lusa | 23 October 2009 ita

At the end of the Seventies when Yugoslav society was calm and predictable, punk was born in Slovenia and young people began to mock communism. Then came the death of Tito, the economic crisis, and the road to independence. A new contribution to our dossier "The long lasting '89".



'Memory Day' Across the Border

'Memory Day' Across the Border

Capodistria | Stefano Lusa | 9 February 2009 ita

On 10 February, Italy commemorates the Istrian Exodus and the "Foibe" whereas on 15 September, Slovenia marks the "restitution of the coast to the motherland." The two countries celebrate, with their own contrasting festivals, conflicting interpretations of what happened in the Upper Adriatic during the 20th century



Slovenia's Hard Line

Slovenia's Hard Line

Capodistria | Stefano Lusa | 22 December 2008 ita

Slovenia quietly blocked Croatia's accession into the European Union (EU), because of a few kilometres of disputed land and maritime border in the Piran bay. The relations between the two countries are tenser than ever before. The EU headquarters is trying not to take sides



In December 1989, 20 years ago, Timişoara citizens fought alone against the regime of Ceausescu. The memories of Ioan Savu, one of the leaders of that revolution, and professor Miodrag Milin, the first to collect the stories of those days. A videoreportage by Davide Sighele and Francesco Martino

Philosopher, dissident, politician. Zhelyu Zhelev has been the first Bulgarian president democratically elected after the fall of the Berlin Wall. A videointerview [Bulgaria, 2009]

progetto di: riga promosso da: riga con il sostegno di:
Fondazione Opera Campana dei Caduti Forum Trentino per la Pace e i Diritti Umani Provincia autonoma di Trento Comune di Rovereto