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Nonka Bogomilova, “The Religious Situation in Contemporary Bulgaria, and in Serbia and<br />
Montenegro: Differences and Similarities,” Volume XXV, Number 4, November 2005,<br />
1-20.<br />
Zsolt Enyedi and Joan O’Mahony, “Churches and the Consolidation of Dematic Culture:<br />
Difference and Convergence in the Czech Republic and Hungary,” Volume XXV,<br />
Number 4, November 2005, 21-42.<br />
Janos Pasztor, “Land, Nationalism and Christian Faith,” Volume XXV, Number 4, November<br />
2005, 43-58.<br />
Book Reviews: John Anderson, Religious Liberty in Transitional Societies: The Politics of Religion.<br />
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press, 2003. Reviewed by Dennis Dunn. 59-60.<br />
Ina Merdjanova, Religion, Nationalism, and Civil Society in Eastern Europe: The<br />
Postcommunist Palimpsest. Lewiston, Queenston, Lampeter: The Edwin Mellen, Press,<br />
2002. Reviewed by Paul Mojzes, 60-62.<br />
Daina Stukuls Eglitis. Imagining the Nation. <strong>University</strong> Park, Pennsylvania: The<br />
Pennsylvania State <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002. Reviewed by Paulis Laszda. 63-67.<br />
Bradley F. Abrams, The Struggle for the Soul of the Nation: Czech Culture and the Rise of<br />
Communism. Lanham, Boulder, New York, Toronto, Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield<br />
Publishers, Inc., 2004. Reviewed by Šárka Waisová. 67-69.<br />
Volume XXVI (2006)<br />
Ina Merdjanova, “Uneasy Tolerance: Interreligious Relations in Bulgaria after the Fall of<br />
Communism,” Volume XXVI, Number 1, February 2006, 1-10.<br />
James R. Payton, jr., “Churches Ottoman Millet, Religious Nationalism, and Civil Society: Focus<br />
on Kosovo,” Volume XXVI, Number 1, February 2006, 11-23.<br />
Bojan Aleksov, “Adamant and Treacherous: Serbian Historians on Religious Conversions,”<br />
Volume XXVI, Number 1, February 2006, 24-51.<br />
Joseph A. Loya. O.S.A., “Religion Classes in State Institutions in Post-Soviet Russia,” Volume<br />
XXVI, Number 1, February 2006, 52-65.<br />
Book Reviews: Dennis J. Dunn. The Catholic Church in Russia: Popes, Patriarchs, Tsars and<br />
Commissars. Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2004. Reviewed by Daniel<br />
L. Schlafly, Jr. 66-70.<br />
Ivan Cvitkoviæ: Konfesija u ratu [Religion in War] Sarajevo, Zagreb: Svjetlo rijeèi and<br />
Interreligijska služba Oèi u oèi, 2004; 223 pp: Vjekoslav Perica: Balkan Idols – Religion and<br />
Nationalism in Yugoslav States. New York: Oxford <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002, 332 pp.<br />
Reviewed by Mitja Velikonja. 70-73.<br />
Leslie László. Church and State in Hungary, 1919-1945. Budapest, International Society for<br />
Encyclopedia of the Church in Hungary, 2004. (METEM Books, Nr. 47.) pp 400.<br />
Reviewed by Csaba Fazekas. 73-76.<br />
<strong>George</strong>tta Pana, “Religious Anti-Semitism in Romanian Fascist Propaganda,” Volume XXVI,<br />
Number 2, May 2006, 1-8.<br />
Pavel Stefanov, “The Bulgarian Orthodox Church and the Holocaust: Addressing Common<br />
Misconceptions,” Volume XXVI, Number 2, May 2006, 9-18.<br />
Suzanne Brown Fleming, “Faith, Action and Inaction During the Holocaust,” Volume XXVI,<br />
Number 2, May 2006, 19-22.<br />
Irina Budkina, “Religious Freedom since 1905 - Any Progress in Russia?” Volume XXVI, Number<br />
32