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Papers by Haris Dajc
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Aug 15, 2020
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Dec 20, 2021
Routledge eBooks, Feb 2, 2022
Radovi Zavoda Za Povijesne Znanosti Hazu U Zadru, Dec 19, 2014
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Dec 13, 2022
Loyola of Los Angeles international and comparative law review, 2018
Religious Practices and Everyday Life in the Long Fifteenth Century (1350–1570), 2021
Зборник радова Филозофског факултета у Приштини, 2019
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Feb 9, 2023
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Dec 13, 2022
CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research - Zenodo, Mar 13, 2014
CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research - Zenodo, Mar 13, 2013
CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research - Zenodo, Oct 7, 2022
Knjiga sažetaka sa međunarodne konferencije održane 2013. u Beogradu/Book of abstracts from the C... more Knjiga sažetaka sa međunarodne konferencije održane 2013. u Beogradu/Book of abstracts from the Conference held in Belgrade in 2013.
Book of abstracts from the international conference held in 2014.
This article explores the status of Josif Schlesinger (1794–1870), the first Serbian composer and... more This article explores the status of Josif Schlesinger (1794–1870), the first Serbian composer and professional musician in the court of Prince Miloš Obrenović (1780–1860), in the complex process of constructing Jewish identity in the web of Jewish legislation at the crossroads of the Ottoman and Habsburg Empires. Schlesinger was singled out as one of the most prominent Jews in the Principality of Serbia. His status was far more favorable than that of Jews of other professions, especially merchants. The attitude of the Serbian government towards Jews during most of the nineteenth century can be divided into two periods. During the first period, until the early 1840s, Jews were free to work, travel, and settle, while during the second period, which lasted until the Serbians achieved independence in 1878, Serbia had anti-Semitic laws that suppressed Jewish rights to work, travel, and settle. The anti-Jewish laws were so strict that the Alliance Israélite Universelle had to write to the...
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Aug 15, 2020
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Dec 20, 2021
Routledge eBooks, Feb 2, 2022
Radovi Zavoda Za Povijesne Znanosti Hazu U Zadru, Dec 19, 2014
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Dec 13, 2022
Loyola of Los Angeles international and comparative law review, 2018
Religious Practices and Everyday Life in the Long Fifteenth Century (1350–1570), 2021
Зборник радова Филозофског факултета у Приштини, 2019
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Feb 9, 2023
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research), Dec 13, 2022
CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research - Zenodo, Mar 13, 2014
CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research - Zenodo, Mar 13, 2013
CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research - Zenodo, Oct 7, 2022
Knjiga sažetaka sa međunarodne konferencije održane 2013. u Beogradu/Book of abstracts from the C... more Knjiga sažetaka sa međunarodne konferencije održane 2013. u Beogradu/Book of abstracts from the Conference held in Belgrade in 2013.
Book of abstracts from the international conference held in 2014.
This article explores the status of Josif Schlesinger (1794–1870), the first Serbian composer and... more This article explores the status of Josif Schlesinger (1794–1870), the first Serbian composer and professional musician in the court of Prince Miloš Obrenović (1780–1860), in the complex process of constructing Jewish identity in the web of Jewish legislation at the crossroads of the Ottoman and Habsburg Empires. Schlesinger was singled out as one of the most prominent Jews in the Principality of Serbia. His status was far more favorable than that of Jews of other professions, especially merchants. The attitude of the Serbian government towards Jews during most of the nineteenth century can be divided into two periods. During the first period, until the early 1840s, Jews were free to work, travel, and settle, while during the second period, which lasted until the Serbians achieved independence in 1878, Serbia had anti-Semitic laws that suppressed Jewish rights to work, travel, and settle. The anti-Jewish laws were so strict that the Alliance Israélite Universelle had to write to the...
by Eliezer Papo, Nenad Makuljevic, Jelena Erdeljan, Vuk Dautović, Filip Mitricevic, Milica Božić Marojević, Saša M Brajović, Angelina Bankovic, Haris Dajc, Łukasz Byrski, Jakov Đorđević, Sofija Grandakovska, Aleksandar Kadijevic, Maja Kaninska, Aleksandar Kadijevic, Danijela Stefanovic, Stevan/Daniel Milovanović/Perahya, Draginja Maskareli, Barbara Kristina Murovec, Nataša Mišković, Tijana Zebic-Bjelica, Ana Ciric Pavlovic, David Rotman, Milica Rožman, Svetlana Smolčić, Katja Smid, Isidora Stanković, Danka Spehar, Davor Stipić, Gordana Todoric, Katarzyna Taczyńska, Milena Ulcar, Jovana Tesic, Jagoda Večerina, Krinka Vidakovic-Petrov, Aleksandra Ilijevski, Milena Jokanovic (Gnjatovic), Zeljko Jovanovic, Radosav Mikic, Naomi Kojen, Vera Goseva, and Gordana Gorunović
ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS, INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Creating Memories in Early Modern and Modern Art and Literature, 2017
Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review (ILR) , 2019
If we are talking about the consequences of a successful restitution process, the Serbian example... more If we are talking about the consequences of a successful restitution
process, the Serbian example shows that restitution has a positive impact on public finances: it is undoubtedly confirmed that each square meter of returned property is bringing bigger, more long-term, and stable income
to the central state and local authorities’ budgets. It also has an important anti-corruption, anti-monopoly effect: restitution is efficiently removing enormous incomes from the handful of privileged people, monopolists and even organized crime members.
The journal Acta Historiae is an open access (CC BY) external double-blind peer reviewed academic... more The journal Acta Historiae is an open access (CC BY) external double-blind peer reviewed academic periodical; every manuscript is evaluated by two independent experts on the subject matter. The journal publishes original scientific articles, review articles, short scientific articles, reviews and bibliographies from fields of history of medicine, medical deontology, history of mentality, private life, urban and rural everyday life and living conditions, structure of urban and rural settlements, history, demography, boundaries, as well as the history of architecture and urban planning in the context of history, culture and health care institutions.
The first issue of the journal was published in 1961 and for three decades it was one of the most modern, open and dynamic Yugoslavian journals. Since June 2016 the journal is included in ERIH PLUS.
Editor in chief is prof. dr Nikola Samardžić
http://actahistorica.com/xxxv2016/
Knjiga saopštenja sa Naučne konferencije “Stranci u Beogradu XVIII i XIX veka” održane 15-16.oktobra 2012. godine u Beogradu, 2013