Janez Stanovnik

Janez Stanovnik
12th President of the Presidency of SR Slovenia
In office
1988–1990
Preceded by France Popit
Succeeded by Milan Kučan
Personal details
Born (1922-08-04) August 4, 1922
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Political party League of Communists of Slovenia (Until 1989)
Other political
affiliations
Party of Democratic Renewal (From 1989)

Janez Stanovnik (born 4 August 1922) is a Slovenian economist, politician, and former partisan. He served as the last President of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia between 1988 and 1990. Since 2003, he has been the president of the Slovenian Partisan veterans' association.

Biography

He was born in Ljubljana, then part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, to a Slovene Roman Catholic family. His father Ivan Stanovnik was a prominent member of the left wing of the Slovene People's Party and served as deputy mayor of Ljubljana.[1] His mother was the niece of the Bishop of Ljubljana Anton Bonaventura Jeglič.[2]

He attended the classical gymnasium in Ljubljana. As a high school student, he became active in the Cristian Socialist association Zarja (Dawn), where he became acquainted with the Christian left intellectuals like Edvard Kocbek and Bogo Grafenauer.[3] After the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia, he became active in the Liberation Front of the Slovenian People and was imprisoned by the Italian occupation regime between autumn 1941 and February 1942.[4] Soon after his release from jail, he joined the partisan resistance in the Province of Ljubljana. In February 1944, he joined the Communist Party.[5] Between April 1944 and May 1945, he was among the organizers of the partisan resistance in the Slovenian Littoral and was member of the regional national liberation committee.

In 1946, after the war, he became the personal secretary of the Slovene Yugoslav Communist leader Edvard Kardelj. He graduated from the University of Belgrade's Law School. Between 1952 and 1956, he was member of the Yugoslav mission at the United Nations. In 1956, he returned to Yugoslavia and started studying economy. He was Professor at both the Institute of Social Sciences in Belgrade, and the University of Ljubljana.[6][7][8]

Between 1965 and 1966, he served as an advisor to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and between 1968 and 1983, he worked on the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe.

In 1988, he was appointed as President of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia. Due to the political upheaval, he managed to use this largely ceremonial position in order to negotiate with the opposition groups, especially the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights during the Slovenian Spring. Because of his support for a peaceful transition to parliamentary democracy, he was called by the press, somewhat ironically, "father of the nation".[9]

In 2003, he was elected as Chairman of the association of Slovenian partisan veterans.

He was the cousin of the Christian Socialist activist Aleš Stanovnik, who was executed by the Italian occupation forces in 1942. He is also the cousin of Tine Velikonja, former member of the Slovene Home Guard and prominent activists of the Home Guard veteran association Nova slovenska zaveza (New Slovenian Covenant) after 1990.[10]

References

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