2024-03-28T22:17:32Z
http://easy.dans.knaw.nl/oai/
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55587
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-xf8-cdnm
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Jovo Kovačević
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Civilian
Albanian
Red Cross
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Temporal coverage: 1941 - 1945
Jovo Kovačević
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2010-11-25T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-e8cu-fg
easy-dataset:55587
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
Jovo Kovačević was born in 1957 in Donji Lapac, Croatia. His family was active in the resistance movement during World War II. In September 1991 he was conscripted in the military of Republic of Serbian Krajina. In August 1995 he left Croatia and lived as a refugee in Serbia, together with his wife and two children. In 1997, after he received Croatian documents, he returned to Croatia. His house was restored in 2002.
In the aftermath of military operation Storm, his father-in-law stayed in Croatia in the village of Brezovac, where he was killed. The trial is currently ongoing on the Municipal Court of Gospić, office in Donji Lapac.
Donji Lapac, Croatia
Inđija, Serbia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55586
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-z5k-7kkn
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Vera Winter
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1941 - 1945
Temporal coverage: 1945 - 1991
Vera Winter
Tamara Banjeglav
Ana Antonija Opalić
Darija Marić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-05-10T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-frdm-hv
easy-dataset:55586
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
The female interviewee was born in 1923 in Bosnia. She was 18 years old when WWII started. During the war, she was captured and kept in an Ustashe prison in Petrinjska street. In 1947 she graduated as an economist and immediately found a job. But soon she was ordered to work for the Ministry in Belgrade, and in 1950 she was arrested because she was considered to have contacts with a spy. She was brought to Goli otok as a political prisoner. She goes into detail describing the daily life in this prisoners’ camp, where she was imprisoned until 1953. She reflects on the late fifties and the changing situation in former Yugoslavia during that period. It was only in 1989, when the old communist world was falling apart, that she dared to give an interview on the situation as she had experienced it in Goli otok.
Goli otok, Rab, Croatia
Zagreb, Croatia
Sveti Grgur, Rab, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55585
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-xvr-7fee
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Jasenka Borojević
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Jasenka Borojević
Ivana Keser
Monika Puljić
Ana Antonija Opalić
Marko Smokvina
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-03-29T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-l1kz-9y
easy-dataset:55585
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
The female interviewee, born in 1946 and with a Croat background, recalls the stories her father told her about his time in detention in WWII in the Jasenovac camp. She tells that she got married with a man with Serb background and explains that this never posed any problems in the family during Yugoslav times. She describes the growing suspicion towards her husband in the 1980s. She tells how her husband went missing during the war in the 1990s and how she found out that he was tortured and killed. She describes the burial of her husband during the war and about her fears to start a police investigation to find out what happened. The narrator tells about how people started disappearing during the war and about Operation Storm. She also tells that her husband until this day has not been recognized legally as a war victim and explains the legal battle she continues to fight. The narrator describes the hardship she is facing being a woman alone and lacking justice concerning the death of her husband.
Sisak, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55584
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-xdr-4wd5
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Gordan Vukić
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1941 - 1945
Temporal coverage: 1945 - 1991
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Gordan Vukić
Marko Smokvina
Zrinka Kolarić
Ana Antonija Opalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-06-08T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-rixs-r9
easy-dataset:55584
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
In the early eighties, this interviewee went to university in Zadar, where he studied history and philosophy. He served in the army in the borderland garrison in Surdulica, near Vladičin Han in southern Serbia. During his university years, he noticed that nationalism among the various groups in Yugoslavia was rapidly growing, and that the churches had a hand in this. It was only towards ‘Bloody Easter’ and with the Serb barricades however, that he realised that war would be unavoidable. Then Mladić attacked Drniš and the real fighting started. From being a history and philosophy student he suddenly became a soldier. He had to guard prisoners from the JNA and later on he joined the forces nearer to the frontier. In this interview he elaborately describes what he saw from within the Croatian forces during the war years.
Drniš, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55583
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-xg4-jays
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Vladimir Ćalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1941 - 1945
Temporal coverage: 1945 - 1991
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Vladimir Ćalić
Ana Antonija Opalić
Marko Smokvina
Sava Ćalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2010-10-29T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-lxi3-2o
easy-dataset:55583
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
The male interviewee, born in 1928 and with a Serb background, recalls memories about his experiences during the WWII. He describes the attack of the German army in 1944 and the hunger and hardship his family faced. The narrator tells how his family lost property and experienced a famine during this war. During the 1990s the narrator had to flee during Operation Storm in August 1995. He fled to a refugee center in Serbia where he stayed until April 1997. He recalls how hard it was to leave behind his house and cattle, losing it for a second time. The narrator describes the humanitarian aid he received during the war and emphasizes that this war, in contrary to the WWII, should and could have been avoided. He is telling about how he would like to see that every citizen would gain full equal rights and sees this as a solution to prevent another war from happening.
Krbavica, Plitvička Jezera, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55582
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zf5-2vyf
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Luko Brailo
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Luko Brailo
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-10-17T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-kfiq-lz
easy-dataset:55582
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
This journalist was born in Dubrovnik in 1950, where he worked for several newspapers throughout the years. During the war of the 90s he worked for the newspaper Slobodna Dalmacija, which they kept publishing in the besieged town of Dubrovnik. In the interview he reflects on the events in Montenegro in the late 80s, and the raise of nationalist sentiments after the death of Tito. In Dubrovnik, the situation got worse and worse during the war. He sent his wife and children to Bari in Italy and stayed behind to work in a small team of journalists for the newspaper.
Dubrovnik, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55581
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-x7k-ewkz
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Slavko Komar
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1941 - 1945
Slavko Komar
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Ivana Krce
Ana Komar
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-01-18T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-mu0t-tm
easy-dataset:55581
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
Slavko Komar was born in Gospić, Croatia in 1918. He went to school in Zagreb, where he got a law degree. In 1937 he became a member of Young Communist League of Yugoslavia. He participated in many political actions during World War II. Because of his activities he was forced to go underground. On august 4th 1941 he led one of the biggest actions against the Ustashe regime in Zagreb, known as ""Botanical Garden"". He and his group attacked an Ustashe patrol in Runjanin Street. Because of constant surveillance he left Zagreb and joined the National Liberation Army. In 1944 he was elected as one of the members of National Anti-Fascist Council of the People's Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH). During and after the war he held a number of high positions. He was in charge of leading the agrarian reform in the aftermath of World War II. This part of his activities he considers to be his biggest achievement in building socialism. He was decorated with the Order of the People's Hero of Yugoslavia in 1952. He died in Zagreb in 2012.
Zagreb, Croatia
Sušačka Luka, Croatia
Žumberak, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55580
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zmg-57f5
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Ana Raffai
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1945 - 1991
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Ana Raffai
Milena Ostojić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-12-15T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-h4h3-gp
easy-dataset:55580
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
This female narrator was born in Zagreb in the late fifties. After a short introduction to her father, who wanted to study Theology but chose not to, because of problems with the Yugoslavian state institutions, she tells about her youth in a Catholic family during the seventies and her activities for the Institute of Theological Culture of Laymen. In 1985, she started working. She got married to a Hungarian man and they started a family. It was during that time that the war began, which brought a lot of stress and fear to her as a young mother. From July 1991 until the end of 1993 she followed her husband to Austria and Switzerland, where he found a job. Because they were pacifists and her husband objected against military service during the war, they had to be very careful each time they had to return home for new visa. They met a Catholic priest who was involved in the Peace Movement, which they kept supporting over the years, until today.
Zagreb, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55579
2023-06-07T09:27:59Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zs5-9gwa
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Dario Smolić-Počak ***
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Darko Smolić-Počak
Ana Antonija Opalić
Marko Smokvina
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2012-12-21T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-gxf3-6c
easy-dataset:55579
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
The female interviewee, born in 1968 and with a Serb background, tells how she did not experience any animosities between people before the war and how she was surprised when war broke out. She tells how she and her husband lost their jobs and had to live off agriculture during the war. The narrator describes the lack of electricity. She tells how she and her family had to flee their house during Operation Storm and went via Bosnia to Serbia with a main convoy. During this journey the narrator witnessed the bombing of the convoy in Bosanski Petrovac. The narrator tells about her life as a refugee for more than 9 years and tells about the hardship particularly her children faced. The family returned in 2002 and started renovating their house. The narrator recalls how difficult it was to be separated from friends and family because of their flight.
Sukošan, Croatia
Zadar, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55578
2023-06-07T09:27:59Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zrj-zux3
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Milan Nakarada
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1941 - 1945
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Milan Nakarada
Marko Smokvina
Ivana Krce
Ana Antonija Opalić
Zrinka Kolarić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2010-10-11T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-orog-7f
easy-dataset:55578
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
Milan Nakarada was born in Ličko Petrovo Selo, Croatia in 1934. Before the Homeland War he lived and worked in Lika, Croatia. Following the outbreak of the war his native village became a part of the Republic of Serb Krajina. During operation Storm he left Croatia and lived as a refugee in Pančevo, Serbia. He returned to Croatia in 1998. Today he is retired and lives in Ličko Petrovo Selo, Croatia.
Ličko Petrovo Selo, Plitvička Jezera, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55577
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zwt-7vhe
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Željko Brala
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Homeland War
Displaced Person
Defender
Croats
War Operations
Battlefield
War Victims
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Željko Brala
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Maša Zlodi
Josip Ivanović
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-03-15T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-9o88-im
easy-dataset:55577
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
Željko Brala was born on March 2, 1968 in Posedarje, the Zadar hinterland. On March 5, 1991, he became a member of the Special Police Unit in Zadar. He was in the formations of Special Units until December 1992, when he began working in the First Police Station in Zadar. During one of the shellings of Posedarje, his mother was wounded and his house was demolished. In the Homeland War he was at the first line of battle all over the Zadar County. During the war and after it, he participated in many fights. He witnessed the death of his colleagues and his life was in danger many times. He was treated for PTSD, which is the reason why he went into early retirement in 1997.
Today, he lives in Posedarje, he has a wife and four children and he breeds ecologically grown fruit and is engaged in bee-keeping.
Posedarje, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55576
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zcb-sdvg
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Jany Hansal
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Jany Hansal
Monika Puljić
Ana Antonija Opalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-11-29T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-dcqr-99
easy-dataset:55576
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
This Catholic woman has lived in the town of Dubrovnik her entire life. She was born in 1949. She passionately tells us the story of her childhood, which was peaceful and happy – despite the lack of everything children have access to nowadays. She loved her hometown Dubrovnik and loved the Catholic Holidays. In 1990 it was her own mother who warned her that a war was at hand. Soon afterwards, large groups of refugees came to Dubrovnik. The narrator went to Germany during the war, where she tried to convince German politicians and stakeholders to help and find a solution for the situation in former Yugoslavia and in Dubrovnik. But a lot of German people did not really understand her cry for help. Together with her children she came back and started organizing creative sewing and knitting workshops for refugee women.
Dubrovnik, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55575
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zp6-6858
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Marko Gojević
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1941 - 1945
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Marko Gojević
Zrinka Kolarić
Maja Dubljević
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-08-30T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-1cc8-k8
easy-dataset:55575
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
This male interviewee was born in the late fifties in a family of Croatian farmers. Their village was surrounded by villages with a mostly Serb population. In the sixties, there was already some bullying going on among the children from different cultural backgrounds and the narrator used to sing old Ustashe songs with his friends, though their parents told them not to. In August 1990, Serbian barricades appeared near the village of Kijevo, where his parents still lived at the time. They were not allowed to bring anything into the village and every person crossing the checkpoints was registered by the Serbs. The interviewee joined the local MUP as a volunteer. Soon the village of Kijevo was under attack by Serbian forces. Only the women and old people stayed in the village, the younger men continued fighting the Serbs from the mountains and the woods. After the fall of Kijevo, he became a member of the Hiking-diverzant unit, that was active until in 1992 Kijevo's Independent Home-Guard Company was founded with more than one hundred members from Kijevo. As one of the Croatian officers, he was involved in several meetings. In this interview he describes his daily life and the situation in the Kijevo area during the war period.
Glavas, Kijevo, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55574
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zxq-sx7v
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Marko Đukić
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Marko Đukić
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Nataša Stepčić
Josip Ivanović
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-02-17T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-7yvz-q7
easy-dataset:55574
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
The male interviewee, born in 1946 and with a Serb background, tells how, in economic terms, his life was good before the war in the 1990s. He tells how few Croats were living in his area and how he did not experience any animosity between different ethnicities. In the area he lived war went by rather unnoticed, except for the citizens that went to the battlefield. The narrator describes how fear and division took hold of people’s lives after the killings in Diviselo. He tells about his membership of the political party Social Democratic Party (SDP). The narrator recalls the events on the day Operation Storm started, on August 5, 1995. He tells about he had to flee his town together with his family which he describes as a very intrusive experience. During their flight they passed through Banja Luka in Bosnia to end up in Inđija in Serbia with relatives. He describes the hardship they suffered as refugees. He tells how it was here that he barely escaped forced recruitment by Arkan’s army. Upon return to Croatia, he found out that his house was ruined and he tells about the reconstruction.
Donji Lapac, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55573
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-xeu-ur4n
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Mirjana Vujčić
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Mirjana Vujčić
Milena Ostojić
Monika Puljić
Stjepan Vujčić
Aleksandar Radnić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-06-13T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-5t4j-k2
easy-dataset:55573
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
The female interviewee is a woman from northwest Bosnia, born in 1960. She was two years old when her family moved to Kostrići. In 1979 she went to Zagreb in order to work as a nurse. She got married and lived a quiet life with her husband and children until she noticed that things were changing at work. All of a sudden it was relevant if another nurse was Serbian, for example. This never was an issue before. She describes more examples of this segregation, from a personal perspective. When the war started, her parents wanted to stay in Kostrići. It was here that they were killed during the war. She herself continued working and took care of their two young children, while her husband joined the army. It was a difficult and scary time, because she never knew whether her children were safe during the air raids, when she had to stay in the hospital. After Operation Storm she went to search for her family in Kostrići, together with her brother who had been in the army. They found the remains of their parents. Their sister and her young family are still missing, they found out that their sisters’ house was burned to the ground. Her feeling about the war is that it may have ended officially, but a lot of people still feel the hatred because of what people have done to each other in these years
Zagreb, Croatia
Kostrići, Majur, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55572
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zxr-9ka8
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Dušan Ljubičić
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Dušan Ljubičić
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2010-11-03T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-30ok-xd
easy-dataset:55572
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
Dušan Ljubičić was born in the village Krupa, near Obrovac, Croatia, in 1952. Before the Homeland war he worked as a mechanic in Zagreb Transport. During the war he was a member of Civil Protection of the Republic of Serb Krajina and organized the evacuation of civilians from Obrovac during the operations Storm. Following the operation Storm he lived with his family as a refugee in Novi Sad, Serbia. He returned to Croatia in 1998. Today he lives with his family in Krupa and is the president of the Serb National Council in Obrovac, Croatia.
Krupa, Obrovac, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55571
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D33000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D60000
easy-collection:1
easy-collection:7
10.17026/dans-x62-ufqz
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Petar Grdić Kinkela
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Theology and religious
studies
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Petar Grdić
Marko Smokvina
Mirna Bačun
Marko Smokvina
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2010-12-20
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-al21-7g
easy-dataset:55571
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
Petar Grdić Kinkela was born in 1969 in Saborsko, Croatia. Before the war he was working in "3 maj" shipyard in Rijeka. Before the start of the war he began to work in the police station in Saborsko. He lived in Saborsko during the siege of the town in 1991. Following the fall of Saborsko in November 1991. he spent the following days hiding in the forest, together with his mother and two other villagers. Today he works in police station in Zaprešić, near Zagreb.
Saborsko, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55570
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-x2d-q6zu
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Vladimir Onofri
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Vladimir Onofri
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-12-01T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-bfpq-sz
easy-dataset:55570
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
This Croatian man was born in Benkovac in 1950. He describes himself as 'idealistic and humanistic'. In his twenties, he was involved in the Yugoslavian workers' council. Towards the eighties, Poland's Solidarity union became very popular and he tried to initiate something alike among workers in his own union. But due to bureaucracy and complaints about him being too loud, he got into trouble and was interrogated by the police. He felt that the atmosphere in his country was changing, people and groups were set against each other, nationalism was growing rapidly. When Milošević and Tuđman appeared, things got very tense already. Near Benkovac he found out that the Serbs were armed and formed so called defence units. His wife got very nervous under the tension. But the couple did not leave with their children when the war started. With the wisdom of hindsight, he thinks they should have left for their children. They have seen such atrocities and still suffer from this experience. He gives some examples of the considerable tension in daily situations during the war, he reports on the time he was captured by Arkan's men and he reflects on the black and white thinking about the situation by people who have not been there at the time.
Dubrovnik, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55569
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-289-4vgt
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Zdenka Golušić
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Zdenka Golušić
Marko Smokvina
Ana Antonija Opalić
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2011-10-18T00:00:00.000+02:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-kl1s-py
easy-dataset:55569
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
She was born in Sarajevo in 1943, but this female narrator moved to Zagreb at the age of 4. It was here that she got married and together with her husband she moved to Dubrovnik in 1971. Though she noticed that all central positions were held by Serbian people at the time, nationality was not an issue in the 70s. The couple raised three children. When the war began in the early 90s, they first thought they heard thunder. But soon they discovered that Dubrovnik was bombed. The narrator was held hostage en was interrogated for days by local warlords near Trebinje. It was all very scary and as soon as she was released she sent her children away and went away herself as well. Her husband stayed in the besieged town.
Dubrovnik, Croatia
Bileca, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Trebinje, Bosnia and Herzegovina
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:55568
2024-03-18T13:40:35Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D30000:D37000
D30000:D33000
D40000:D44000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D50000:D54000
D20000:D24000
D60000
easy-collection:1
10.17026/dans-zz4-ruj3
Documenta - Center for Dealing with the Past, Zagreb
CroMe interview with Ivan Žagrović
Documenta Zagreb
2013
Modern and contemporary
history
Health sciences
Theology and religious
studies
Archaeology
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Traffic and transport studies
Behavioural and educational
sciences
Pedagogics
Social sciences
Life sciences, medicine and health care
Oral History
Temporal coverage: 1991 - Today
Ivan Žagrović
Ana Antonija Opalić
Zrinka Kolarić
Ivana Krce
Marko Smokvina
Documenta Zagreb
2013-09-24
2010-12-02T00:00:00.000+01:00
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-qnk8-bp
easy-dataset:55568
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
DANS License
Ivan Žagrović was born in Saborsko, Croatia, in 1944. In the years before the war he lived and worked in Saborsko. He lived in Saborsko during the siege laid by Yugoslav National Army and the paramilitary forces. In November 1991 he left Saborsko and lived as a refugee in Rijeka, Croatia. In July 1995 he joined the Croatian Army, where he stayed until August 1995. He returned to Saborsko in 1997. Today he lives in Saborsko
Saborsko, Croatia
Plaški, Croatia
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:163121
2023-06-07T09:29:06Z
D30000:D34000:D34300
D40000:D42000:D42100
D60000:D61000
driver
D40000:D41000:D41500
easy-collection:7
E10000:E14000
10.17026/dans-279-h7sy
Woude, M.A.H. van der
328454842
0000-0003-1165-9233
0000000111864339
Universiteit Leiden
Klajn, M.E.
Universiteit Leiden
Political meanings of national belonging: tracing evolution of Polishness in Third Republic of Poland
Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
2020
Migration, ethnic relations and
multiculturalism
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Political science
Sociology
Modern and contemporary
history
Poland; national identity; borders; discourse analysis; Polishness; othering; Perliamentary debates
Temporal coverage: 1989-2018
Universiteit Leiden
Universiteit Leiden
2020-06-01
2019-08-22
2020-06-01
en
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-ec-c7gv
easy-dataset:163121
application/pdf
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
This work is part of the 5-year research project “Getting to the Core of Crimmigration” (project number 452-16-003), which is financed through the VIDI research scheme by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), led my Professor M.A.H. Van de Woude. It as a part of Maryla Klajn’s doctoral dissertation “Agents of Change? (Hi)stories, perspectives, and every-day practices of the intra-Schengen border officials”. The paper: “Political meanings of national belonging: tracing the evolution of ‘Polskość’ in the III Republic of Poland” focuses on the a backlash response, to the effects of trans-national trends of past several decades, progressively more visible in recent years and expressed in the rise of populist, anti-migration movements in many countries throughout the world. Within the EU, Poland has become one of the most notorious anti-migration and pro- closed border states, with its new government elected in 2015 embracing a nationalist discourse, positioning the well-being of the country against the ‘invasion’ of other ethnicities and religions. The concept of Polskość, or Polish national identity (Polishness), is frequently used to legitimize political decision-making, and the idea of necessary protection of the socio-cultural homogeneity as the foundation of Polskość drives forward discussions of strengthening and securitizing the boundaries to protect it. It seems prudent then to question the meaning of that ‘national identity’, and by deconstructing values and ideas linked to that concept over time, understand what is really being protected when discussing protection of Polskość. We should ask then: in the III Republic of Poland, what were the initial political narratives that defined Polish national identity, and how have they evolved over time? This study locates and maps out shifts in the political discussions of Polskość over the last three decades by deploying critical policy discourse analysis in examination of the Polish parliamentary debates since 1989, and of Presidential New Year’s Eve addresses to the nation 1990-2018.
Poland
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:248371
2023-12-31T06:01:41Z
D40000:D42000:D42100
D40000:D42000:D42200
D30000:D38000
D40000:D41000:D41500
D60000:D65000
E10000:E15000
easy-collection:7
10.17026/dans-xd6-w7pc
Reckien, D.
0000-0002-1145-9509
Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC), University of Twente, The Netherlands
Olazabal, M.
0000-0002-3381-0654
Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3), Parque Científico UPV/EHU, Edificio Sede 1, Planta 1, Barrio Sarriena, S/n, 48940, Leioa, Spain
Buzasi, A.
0000-0002-4088-9276
Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Department of Environmental Economics, Magyar Tud´osok K¨orútja 2, Budapest, H-1117, Hungary
Eckersley, P.
0000-0001-9048-8529
Nottingham Trent University, 50 Shakespeare Street, Nottingham, NG1 4FP, United Kingdom/ Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, Flakenstraße 29-31, 15537, Erkner, Germany
Simoes, S.G
0000-0001-8989-0377
The National Energy Laboratory of Portugal (LNEG), Unit on Resource Economics, Estrada da Portela, Bairro Do Zambujal Ap 7586, 2720-999, Amadora, Portugal
Spyridaki, N.-A.
0000-0001-6519-7105
TEESlab, University of Piraeus, Greece
Salvia, M.
0000-0002-4372-9112
Institute of Methodologies for Environmental Analysis – National Research Council of Italy, C.da S. Loja, 85050, Tito Scalo, PZ, Italy
Pietrapertosa, F.
0000-0003-4112-3819
Institute of Methodologies for Environmental Analysis – National Research Council of Italy, C.da S. Loja, 85050, Tito Scalo, PZ, Italy
Goonesekera, S.M.
0000-0002-2016-3937
Metroeconomica Colon de Larreategui, 26 1º 48009 Bilbao (Bizkaia), Spain
Fokaides, P.A.
0000-0003-0112-872X
School of Engineering, Frederick University, 7, Frederickou Str., 1036, Nicosia, Cyprus
Balzan, M.V.
0000-0003-1412-1375
Institute of Applied Sciences, Malta College of Arts, Science and Technology, Paola, PLA9032, Malta
Bastakova, V.
0000-0003-0906-2710
3E - Institute for Environmental Research and Education, Stefanikova 35, 903 01 Senec, Slovakia
Belsak Sel, N.
0000-0003-3931-9177
SRC Bistra Ptuj, Slovenski Trg 6, 2250, Ptuj, Slovenia
Church, J.M.
0000-0002-4654-5386
Universit´e de Reims, 57 Rue Pierre Taittinger, 51571, Reims Cedex, France
Boer, C. de
0000-0001-6491-2592
Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC), University of Twente, The Netherlands
De Gregorio Hurtado, S.
0000-0002-5528-3365
School of Architecture, Department of Urban and Spatial Planning, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Avenida de Juan de Herrera, 4, 28040, Madrid, Spain
Feliu Torres, E.
TECNALIA, Basque Research and Technology Alliance (BRTA); Energy, Climate and Urban Transition Unit of Tecnalia Research & Innovation; Edificio 700, Parque Tecnologico de Bizkaia, 48160 Derio, Spain
Flamos, A.
0000-0002-6581-5572
TEESlab, University of Piraeus, Greece
Foley, A.
0000-0001-6562-9529
Queen’s University Belfast, School of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering, Ashby Building, Stranmillis Road, Belfast, BT9 5AH, United Kingdom
Geneletti, D.
0000-0001-8801-3890
Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, University of Trento, Via Mesiano 77, 38123, Trento, Italy
German Fernandez, J.
0000-0002-2601-2558
Centre International de Recherche sur L’Environnement et le D´eveloppement (CIRED). 45bis, Av de La Belle Gabrielle, F-94736, Nogent-sur-Marne, France
Heidrich, O.
School of Engineering, Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, United Kingdom
Ioannou, B.I.
0000-0003-3964-1879
School of Engineering, Frederick University, 7, Frederickou Str., 1036, Nicosia, Cyprus
Juhel, S.
0000-0003-0616-9870
CIRED - Centre International de Recherche sur l'Environnement et le Développement, 45 bis, avenue de la Belle Gabrielle, 94736 Nogent-sur-Marne Cedex, France
Krook-Riekkola, A.
0000-0002-7965-9451
Department of Engineering Sciences and Mathematics, Luleå University of Technology (LTU), Energy Science Unit, SE, 971 87, Luleå, Sweden
Krkoska Lorencová, E.
CzechGlobe, Global Change Research Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Bˇelidla 986/4a, 603 00, Brno, Czech Republic
Matosovic, M.
PwC Savjetovanje, Heinzelova 70, 10000, Zagreb, Croatia
Orru, H.
Institute of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of Tartu, Ravila 19, 51007, Tartu, Estonia/ Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umea University, Umeå Universitet, 901 87, Umea, Sweden
Paspaldzhiev, I.
0000-0001-8830-6706
Denkstatt Bulgaria Ltd, 115 Arsenalski Blvd Ent. 1, Fl. 5, App. 7, 1421, Sofia, Bulgaria
Riznar, K.
0000-0002-8994-2648
SRC Bistra Ptuj, Slovenski Trg 6, 2250, Ptuj, Slovenia
Streberova, E.
0000-0002-6723-646X
Metropolitný inštitút Bratislavy, Primaciálne námestie
Szalmane Csete, M.
0000-0001-7170-9402
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
Vasilie, S.
0000-0001-9279-9638
Denkstatt Romania SRL, Str. Madrid Nr.22, 300391, Timisoara, Romania
Viguié, V.
CIRED - Centre International de Recherche sur L’Environnement et le D´eveloppement (CIRED). 45bis, Av de La Belle Gabrielle, F-94736, Nogent-sur-Marne, France
Wejs, A.
NIRAS A/S, Østre Havnegade 12, 9000, Aalborg, Denmark/ Department of Planning, Aalborg University, Rendsburggade 14, 9000, Aalborg, Denmark
Plan quality characteristics of Local Climate Adaptation Plans in Europe
Content analysis of EU Local Climate Adaptation Plans and Strategies
Content analysis of EU Local Climate Adaptation Plans and Strategies
Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC), University of Twente, The Netherlands
2024
Urban and rural planning
Political and administrative
sciences
Social and public
administration
Political science
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Area Studies
Interdisciplinary sciences
Local Climate Planning
Climate change adaptation planning
Local climate plans and strategies
Content analysis
Plan quality
Urban Audit Cities
EU-28
Global Stocktake (GST) of Paris Agreement
Green gas mitigation
Climate change adaptation
Temporal coverage: Data collection: March 2019 to June 2021, depending on the country and city. (Publication) Date of local adaptation plans: 2005 - 2020.
Dr.rer.nat. D. Reckien (Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC), University of Twente, The Netherlands)
2022-06-14
2022-04-30
2024-04-30
en
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-l5-ctmw
easy-dataset:248371
https://www.lcp-initiative.eu/
Spreadsheet .csv
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
License: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0
This dataset contains information on the characteristics of Local Climate Adaptation Plans in Europe. A sample of 328 medium- to large-sized cities across the formerly EU-28 was investigated for the availability of Local Climate Plans and strategies on climate change adaptation. A set of 168 cities out of the 328 were identified to have at least one, if not more Local Climate Adaptation Plans. The contents of these plans were documented, using an elaborated framework combining indicators of state-of-the -art plan quality principles with indicators of justice/ equity theory. Used common plan quality principles are 1) Fact base - Climate change impact, risk and vulnerability assessment (related to risk, sectors, justice), 2) Adaptation goals (related to risk, quantitative); 3) Adaptation measures (distributed across 12 sectors, justice); 4) Implementation process (prioritization, responsibility, timeframe) & tools (budget); 5) Monitoring & evaluation (responsibility, timeframe, justice). Additionally to the information on these 5 plan quality principles information on the (potential) participation process, a communication strategy, the national and regional context, as well as with access information, access data, access type, and other meta data were retrieved and documented. The publication dates of the plans range from 2005 - 2020. The collection period ranges from March 2019 to June 2021, depending on the country and city, with the majority collected between May 2019 and June 2020.
Representative sample of 328 medium- and large-sized cities in the European-28 (EU-28) countries, based on Urban Audit selection
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:259304
2023-06-07T09:29:31Z
D40000:D41000:D41500
10.17026/dans-zyz-sx22
Asghari, SH Ms
0000-0003-1511-0766
Leiden University
Expert Interviews
Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
2024
Interdisciplinary branches of
law
Socio-legal studies
Asghari, SH Ms.
0000-0003-1511-0766
Leiden University
Sh Ms. Asghari (Leiden University)
2022-10-07
2020-11-28
2024-10-07
en
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-ak-mld3
easy-dataset:259304
application/pdf
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
License: http://dans.knaw.nl/en/about/organisation-and-policy/legal-information/DANSLicence.pdf
Set of qualitative interviews with experts on Afghan migration in Iran.