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Commercial law developments in Yugoslavia with a focus in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia and Albania Abstract: Commercial law is an abstract definition in a central planned economy, but Yugoslavia had a system of its own and in the economic history books it has always a special chapter. It all started with the planned system economy, but very early Yugoslavia followed its own path, namely workers' self-government and a special property form, the so-called social property. Albania instead followed the path of all socialist countries – central planned economy and socialist property. This system can be considered a definition of administrative socialism or etatism.3 This manuscript aims to analyze the commercial reforms in Yugoslavia, Macedonia and Albania and its consequences towards free market economy. A historic and deductive method will be used to analyze the legal reforms that made Yugoslavia a specialty in the communist block. Classification-JEL: K20, K22, K23 Keywords: Yugoslavia, Macedonia, Albania, commercial law, property. Journal: Juridical Tribune (Tribuna Juridica)

Endri Papajorgji () and Rezarta Tahiraj ()
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Endri Papajorgji: Dean of the Faculty of Law at Tirana Business University College, Tirana
Rezarta Tahiraj: Chief of Department of Law at Aleksander Xhuvani University, Elbasan, Albania

Juridical Tribune - Review of Comparative and International Law, 2019, vol. 9, issue Special, 110-116

Date: 2019
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