In the aftermath of World War II and the creation of socialist Yugoslavia, Brijuni became a kind of second Yugoslav capital.
At the end of 2024, the Standing Committee of the Bern Convention adopted a proposal from the European Union to downgrade the wolf’s conservation status from “strictly protected” to “protected”. The ...
Constance, Gdańsk, Klaipėda, Ejsberg. These are some of the European coastal cities that are undergoing major expansion of ...
In a quest for truth, renowned author Lea Ypi, with her new book Indignity, embarks on a journey that carries her from the ...
Six countries of the Adriatic-Ionian space have joined forces to protect the mountain ecosystem and regenerate biodiversity.
The Montenegro Media Institute, in cooperation with Osservatorio Balcani Caucaso Transeuropa, is organising a conference to ...
The MFRR Summit 2025 brings together journalists, policymakers, and civil society to address the urgent challenges facing ...
Justice, the role of the EU, life under Russian occupation, and the centrality of people in Ukraine's reconstruction plans: we spoke with Oleksandra Matviichuk, human rights lawyer and director of the ...
In this double interview between Serbia and Croatia, we talk to two experts about the state of the wolf population, until ...
In questa doppia intervista tra Serbia e Croazia abbiamo parlato con due esperti della situazione del lupo, in UE fino a poco ...
Nakon Drugog svjetskog rata i nastanka socijalističke Jugoslavije, Brijuni su postali neka vrsta druge jugoslavenske ...
Con la Seconda guerra mondiale e la nascita della Jugoslavia socialista, le isole Brioni diventano una sorta di seconda ...
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