Slovenian Democratization
A history of Slovenian democratization.
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
During the World War 1 peace negotiations, nationalists declared a State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs. The Treaty of Trianon wrapped them into the Kingdom of Serbia to form a new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. The official name became Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929.
On March 27th, 1941, King Peter II overthrew the Axis-aligned regency of Paul. Germany invaded in retaliation.
Occupation
Slovenia was partitioned following the invasion:
Southern Slovenia, including Ljubljana, was annexed by Italy alongside Dalmatia.
Prekmurje (Hungarian: Muravidék), a historic component of the Hungarian Slovene March (Slovene: Slovenska krajina, Hungarian: Vendvidék), was annexed by Hungary.
Some small villages were annexed by the Independent State of Croatia.
The remainder was annexed by Germany.
Yugoslavia
Tito led the Yugoslav Partisans to liberate the former kingdom, and following World War 2 established the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. Slovenia was administered as a federal republic within Yugoslavia.
After Tito died, the chair of the presidency council began to rotate among members.
Republic of Slovenia
When Mesić became chair of the presidency council, he ceased to attend meetings. The members from Slovenia and Macedonia similarly abandoned government, leaving just Milošević and his supporters. This effectively ended the executive power of Yugoslavia.
Slovenia and Croatia formally declared independence on June 25th, 1991. This led into the Ten Day War from June 27th through July 7th. The Brijuni Agreement established an armistice during which declarations of independence were frozen but the Yugoslav army had to vacate the relevant territories. Slovenia was admitted to the UN and a Yugoslav state was never re-established over Slovenia.
Slovenia proceeded to join the EU and NATO in 2004; the Eurozone in 2007; and the OECD in 2010.