Yugoslav passport
Yugoslav passport | |
---|---|
The front cover of a former Yugoslav passport. | |
Issued by | Yugoslavia |
Type of document | Passport |
Purpose | Identification |
Eligibility requirements | Yugoslav citizenship |
The Yugoslav passport was issued to citizens of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia for the purpose of international travel. The Yugoslav passport has been described as highly regarded and that with it immigrants were able to find jobs among European firms trading with the East and other countries.[1] It was also described as 'one of the most convenient in the world, as it was one of the few with which a person could travel freely through both the East and West' during the cold war.[2]
Under the Yugoslav federal system, each constituent republic had its own register of citizens, and issued a somewhat distinct variety of passports. In particular, Yugoslav passports issued in SR Macedonia were printed in Macedonian and French, rather than in Serbo-Croatian; those issued in Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo were in Albanian, Serbian, and French.[3]
See also
- Bosnia and Herzegovina passport
- Croatian passport
- Kosovan passport
- Macedonian passport
- Montenegrin passport
- Serbian passport
- Slovenian passport
References
- ↑ Hadžišehović, Munevera (2003). A Muslim Woman in Tito's Yugoslavia. Texas A&M University Press. p. 215. ISBN 1-58544-304-2.
- ↑ Dijk, Ruud Van (2008). Encyclopedia of the Cold War. Taylor & Francis. p. 898. ISBN 0-415-97515-8.
- ↑ Shaw, Jo; Štiks, Igor, eds. (2013), Citizenship After Yugoslavia, Routledge, p. 21, ISBN 1317967070
External links
- Images of a 1977 Yugoslav passport from www.passportland.com