After a close referendum result on independence back in  2006, Montenegro held its first post-statehood Census this spring and its statistical service started releasing the data generated earlier this week.  The 2011 Montenegro Census data were anticipated with both eagerness and trepidation as they had the potential of destabilising or  consolidating the process of state building. Just prior to the Census the government and  political parties had engaged in campaigns charged with nationalist rhetoric using  posters, leaflets and promotional videos to promote their particular preferred outcomes. The outcome seems  to have protracted a sense of societal insecurity among the Montenegrin  population which seems quite split on issues of identity.   As on Monday Monstat released the first results of the April 2011 census  various political  parties and ethnic leaderships have been trying to deploy their own  narratives as to their meaning.  The  Croat National Council urged their p...
from triglav to caucasus
Commentary on the political and cultural developments in Southeastern Europe