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Slaven Letica

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Name
  
Slaven Letica


Role
  
Author

Slaven Letica wwwsaborhrfgsaxdid486

Books
  
Četvrta Jugoslavija, Političko pleme 2, Strašni sud, Postmodernity and genocide in Bosnia, Intelektualac i kriza

N1 Pressing: Hrvoje Klasic i Slaven Letica (9.1.2017.)


Slaven Letica (born 28 June 1947) is a Croatian author, economist, commentator and politician.

Contents

Slaven Letica wwwhalterorgimgrepository201409scaledslav

Bujica 09 11 2015 dr slaven letica o izborima


Biography

A native of Podgora, Letica graduated from the University of Zagreb Faculty of Economics in 1971. In the 1980s, Letica was a professor of sociology of medicine at the School of Medicine, University of Zagreb and a consultant for the World Health Organization, working on health service management projects in a number of countries in Europe, Asia and Africa.

In late 1980s, as the Communist grip on public discourse weakened, Letica began to use new freedoms to advocate various reforms. In doing so, he wrote many articles and columns and he began to appear in television talk shows and town hall meetings, quickly becoming one of the most popular and the most recognisable intellectuals in Yugoslavia.

In May 1990, after the first democratic elections, Franjo Tuđman made him his personal advisor. During negotiations which Tuđman pursued with the leader of the Serbs in Croatia, Jovan Rašković, Letica leaked the transcript of the secretly recorded conversation between Tuđman and Rašković to the Croatian media, hoping that some of Rašković's controversial remarks would give offense to his fellow Croatian Serbs and turn them away from his secessionist policies. As a consequence, however, the comparably moderate Rašković was replaced by Serb radicals, which hastened the start of the war in Croatia. Letica and Tuđman parted ways in March 1991 due to disagreement about Croatian politics towards Bosnia and Herzegovina.

In the following years Letica continued to appear in the Croatian media as a commentator, espousing opposition views, and became a regular columnist for Globus, a popular news magazine. During his time at Globus he gained some notoriety due to an unsigned 1992 opinion piece (which he eventually admitted to have written), titled "Croatian Feminists are Raping Croatia", in which he attacked five Croatian feminist writers (Slavenka Drakulić, Vesna Kesić, Jelena Lovrić, Dubravka Ugrešić and Rada Iveković), accusing them of betraying Croatia. The article was a source of significant controversy which ultimately resulted in a successful defamation lawsuit against the magazine.

Political career

In the Croatian presidential election, 2000, Letica ran as an independent candidate. Although he finished fourth, the relatively high percentage of votes he won (4.14%) made him desirable to the Croatian Party of Rights (HSP), a right-wing party in desperate need to tone down its negative far-right image. Letica, with his reputation of a refined urbanite and European intellectual, served this purpose very well and on the Croatian parliamentary election, 2003, as a candidate on HSP's list, won a seat in the Sabor (Croatian Parliament).

He also associated at one point with the Croatian True Revival, a one-time political project of Miroslav Tuđman and Nenad Ivanković that failed to gain major traction in Croatian politics.

The HSP nevertheless used Letica again as their candidate in the Croatian presidential election, 2005. When Letica won fewer votes than in 2000, 2.59%, he accused the HSP of not supporting him enough. He quit the party midway through his term and remained in the Sabor until January 2008 as an independent.

In the Croatian parliamentary election, 2007, his independent list for the Zagreb region failed to gain the five percent of the vote needed to enter the Parliament.

Personal life

Letica is married to Gordana Cerjan-Letica, a sociologist and a professor at the School of Dental Medicine, University of Zagreb. They have two sons, Bartol (born 1976) and Frane (born 1982).

Works

Selected books:

  • Zdravstvo u Hrvatskoj: razvoj, stanje i perspektive (1981)
  • Kriza i zdravstvo (1984)
  • Zdravstvena politika u doba krize (1984)
  • Intelektualac i kriza (1984)
  • Četvrta Jugoslavija (1989)
  • Obećana zemlja (1992)
  • Divlje misli (1993)
  • The Road from Paradise (1993, co-author)
  • Habits of the Balkan Heart (1993, co-author)
  • Postmoderna i genocid u Bosni i Hercegovini (1997, co-author)
  • Političko pleme (1999)
  • Strašni sud (2002)
  • Medicinska sociologija (2003, co-author)
  • References

    Slaven Letica Wikipedia