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Serbian Culture

References

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


  • Aleksov, B. (2014). The Serbian Orthodox Church. In L. N. Leustean (Ed.), Orthodox Christianity and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Southeastern Europe (pp. 65–100). Fordham University Press.
  • Allcock, J. B., Lampe, J. R., & Poulsen, T. M. (2017). Serbia. In Encyclopaedia Britannica. Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  • Allotey, P., Manderson, L., Nikles, J., Reidpath, D., & Sauvarin, J. (n.d.). Serbians: A Guide for Health Professionals. Queensland Health.
  • 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 Serbia [Data set]. 2021 Census Country of Birth QuickStats.
  • Bajic-Hajdukovic, I. (2013). Food, Family, and Memory: Belgrade Mothers and Their Migrant Children. Food and Foodways, 21(1), 46–65.
  • Bilefsky, D. (2007, December 2). Dark One-Liners Shine a Light on the Mood of Serbs. The New York Times.
  • Central Intelligence Agency. (2024). Serbia. The World Factbook.
  • Culture Crossing Guide. (2014). Serbia. Culture Crossing Guide.
  • Culture Factor Group. (2024). Country Comparison tool: Serbia.
  • Deliso, C. (2008). Culture and Customs of Serbia and Montenegro. ABC-CLIO, LLC.
  • 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). Serbia-born: Community Information Summary. Commonwealth of Australia.
  • Göransson, M. B. (2013, November 4). A Cultural History of Serbia. Balkan Insight.
  • Ivić, P. (1995a). Standard language as an instrument of culture and the product of national history (R. A. Major, Trans.). In P. Ivić (Ed.), The History of Serbian Culture. Porthill Publishers.
  • Ivić, P. (Ed.). (1995b). The History of Serbian Culture (R. A. Major, Trans.). Porthill Publishers.
  • Khalidi, S., McIlroy, F., & Neumayer, H. (2012). The Cultural Dictionary and Directory (3rd ed.). Migrant and Refugee Settlement Services of the ACT Inc.
  • 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 Serbia to Victoria. Museums Victoria.
  • ProQuest. (2017). Republic of Serbia. ProQuest & Brigham Young University.
  • Prosic-Dvornic, M. (1993). Enough! Student Protest ’92: The Youth of Belgrade in Quest of “Another Serbia.” Anthropology of East Europe Review, 11(1 & 2), 127–137.
  • Raković, S. (2012). In the Haze of the Serbian Orthodoxy: ‘Conversion’ to the Ancestral Faith and Falling from the Church: Four Formerly Devout-to-Church Christians Speak. Anthropology of East Europe Review, 30(2), 39–58.
  • Resthaven Incorporated. (2012). South Australian Serbs: A perspective of the older community (Connecting the Community: Supporting the Serbian Community to Access Aged Care). Resthaven Incorporated.
  • Simic, A. (2009). Serbia, Betwixt and Between: Culture, Politics and Images of the West. Anthropology of East Europe Review, 27(1), 88–98.
  • South Eastern Region Migrant Resource Centre. (2010). Serbian Cultural Profile: Older People. Southern Migrant and Refugee Centre.
  • Stanford, E. (2001). Serbia and Montenegro. In M. Ember & C. R. Ember (Eds.), Countries and Their Cultures: Saint Kitts and Nevis to Zimbabwe (Vol. 4, pp. 1963–1975). Macmillan Reference USA; Advameg.
  • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica. (2017). Balkan Wars. In Encyclopaedia Britannica. Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  • Transparency International. (2024). Corruption Perceptions Index 2023.
  • 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.

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