Abstract

ABSTRACT After 1948, Czechoslovak communist elites were intently focused on the issue of population growth. In the post-war period, Czechoslovakia’s population significantly decreased as a result of the expulsion of the German population from the frontier territories of the Czech and Moravia areas. However, the Slovak territory saw much smaller deviations, with higher marriage and birth rates than the overall Czechoslovak average. My aim in this paper is to show the contribution of specific local circumstances in Slovakia and the approach of Czechoslovak communists to the population behaviour trends of the Roma inhabitants in this region.

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