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This work by Janez Kopač is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International

The period after the adoption of the Yugoslav Constitution and the constitutions of the constituent republics in 1963 is characterised by the final abolishment of the districts in the 1960s. These were mostly replaced by the increasingly important municipalities. The Constitution of 1974 and the Law on Associated Labour firmly established self-management as a specific characteristic of Yugoslav law which influenced the working of both social organisations and administrative economic bodies. The period from the late-1960s up until the declaration of Slovene independence and the adoption of the new Slovene Constitution on 23rd December 1991, was marked by numerous changes to the Constitution, which were reflected in the subsequent plethora of often confusing constitutional amendments on the federal Yugoslav level and on the level of the state constitutions alike - the Socialist Republic of Slovenia being no exception, either. The profound social changes of the 1990s following the collapse of the Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia and the establishment of the independent Republic of Slovenia, generated important administrative and territorial reforms on the municipal level in Slovenia towards the end of 1994. In 1994 and the following years, new municipalities were established in the newly formed state. Municipalities lost their heretofore predominantly administrative responsibilities, which passed on to the administrative units established in October 1994. Thus, the municipalities became the carriers of self-management on a local level.