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Croatian Culture

References

The primary author of this profile was Chara Scroope (2017).


  • Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2021a). 4-digit level ANCP Ancestry Multi Response by Australia (UR) (2021 Census of Population and Housing) [Data set]. ABS Census TableBuilder.
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2021b). People in Australia who were born in Croatia [Data set]. 2021 Census Country of Birth QuickStats.
  • Bracewell, C. W., David-Barrett, L., Lampe, J., & Pleština, D. (2016). Croatia. In Encyclopaedia Britannica. Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  • Central Intelligence Agency. (2024). Croatia. The World Factbook.
  • Commisceo Global Consulting. (2016). Guide to Croatian Culture, Etiquette and Business Practices. COMMISCEO Global.
  • Culture Crossing Guide. (2014). Croatia.
  • Culture Factor Group. (2024). Country Comparison tool: Croatia.
  • Cvitanic, M. (2010). Culture and Customs of Croatia. Bloomsbury Publishing USA.
  • Denich, B. (1993). Unmaking Multi-Ethnicity in Yugoslavia: Metamorphosis Observed. Anthropology of East Europe Review, 11(1 & 2), 48–60.
  • Department of Home Affairs. (2018). Croatia-born: Community Information Summary. Commonwealth of Australia.
  • Despalatovic, E. (1993). Reflections on Croatia, 1960-1992. Anthropology of East Europe Review, 11(1 & 2), 118–126.
  • Drapac, V. (2009). Active citizenship in multicultural Australia: The Croatian experience. Humanities Research, XV(1).
  • Gilliland, M. K. (2001). Croatia. In M. Ember & C. R. Ember (Eds.), Countries and Their Cultures: Afghanistan to Czech Republic (Vol. 1, pp. 560–572). Macmillan Reference USA.
  • Horvat, S. (2013, December 4). Croatia’s vote forbidding gay marriage: A sign of the rotten heart of Europe. The Guardian.
  • Keogh, I., McDonald, V., & Moffatt, A. (2011). Croatian Cultural Profile. Home and Community Care Multicultural Advisory Service (HACC MAS) Program, Queensland Department of Communities.
  • Khalidi, S., McIlroy, F., & Neumayer, H. (2012). The Cultural Dictionary and Directory (3rd ed.). Migrant and Refugee Settlement Services of the ACT Inc.
  • Lewis, R. D. (2006). When Cultures Collide: Leading Across Cultures (3rd ed.). Nicholas Brealey Publishing.
  • Macdonald, D. B. (2002). Tito’s Yugoslavia and after: Communism, post-Communism, and the war in Croatia. In Balkan Holocausts? (pp. 183–219). Manchester University Press.
  • Makrides, V. N. (2021). Southeast Europe. In G. Davie & L. N. Leustean (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Europe (pp. 713–729). Oxford University Press.
  • Museums Victoria. (2017). Immigration History from Croatia to Victoria. Museums Victoria.
  • Passport to Trade 2.0. (2014). Croatian Business Culture. Salford Business School.
  • Pisac, A. (2014). Croatian mentality: How to get things done the Croatian way. Croatia Honestly.
  • Povrzanivic, M. (1993). Ethnography of a War: Croatia 1991-92. Anthropology of East Europe Review, 11(1 & 2), 138–148.
  • ProQuest. (2017). Republic of Croatia. ProQuest & Brigham Young University.
  • South Eastern Region Migrant Resource Centre. (2010). Croatian Cultural Profile: Older People. Southern Migrant and Refugee Centre.
  • Transparency International. (2024). Corruption Perceptions Index 2023.
  • United Kingdom Government. (2006). A Guide to Names and Naming Practices.
  • von Klimó, Á. (2021). Central Europe. In G. Davie & L. N. Leustean (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Europe (pp. 601–616). Oxford University Press.
  • Winland, D. (2002). The Politics of Desire and Disdain: Croatian Identity between “Home” and “Homeland.” American Ethnologist, 29(3), 693–718.

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