Jozo Tomasevich

Jozo Tomasevich
Josip Tomašević
Born1908
Died(1994-10-15)October 15, 1994 (aged 86)
CitizenshipUnited States
Alma materUniversity of Basel
Harvard University
Known forWar and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941–1945
SpouseNeda Brelić (m. 1937–1994; his death)
Children3
AwardsAward for Distinguished Contributions to Slavic Studies (1989)
Scientific career
FieldsEconomics
History
InstitutionsSan Francisco State University
Stanford University
Columbia University
Federal Reserve Bank
Board of Economic Warfare
United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration
National Bank of Yugoslavia

Josip "Jozo" Tomasevich (1908 – October 15, 1994; Serbo-Croatian: Josip Tomašević) was an American economist and historian whose speciality was the economic and social history of the former Yugoslavia. Tomasevich was born in the Kingdom of Dalmatia, part of Austria-Hungary, and after completing his schooling, earned a doctorate in economics at the University of Basel in Switzerland. In the mid-1930s, he worked at the National Bank of Yugoslavia in Belgrade and published three well-received books on Yugoslavia's national debt, fiscal policy, and money and credit respectively.

In 1938, he moved to the United States as the recipient of a two-year Rockefeller fellowship and conducted research at Harvard University before joining the academic staff of Stanford University. During World War II, Tomasevich worked for the Board of Economic Warfare and the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, and post-war he joined the Federal Reserve Bank in San Francisco. In 1948, he joined the staff at San Francisco State College (later San Francisco State University). He combined research and teaching there for twenty-five years until his retirement in 1973, which was broken by a year of teaching at Columbia University in 1954. Between 1943 and 1955, Tomasevich published two books on economic matters; one focused on marine resources and the other on the peasant economy of Yugoslavia and both of them received positive reviews.

Tomasevich then embarked on an extensive research and writing project on Yugoslavia in World War II – War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941–1945 – which was planned to include three volumes. Supported by grants and fellowships, he published The Chetniks in 1975, which explored the development and fate of the Chetnik movement during the war. The book was positively reviewed, and twenty-five years later was described as still the "most complete and best book about the Chetniks to be published either abroad or in former Yugoslavia". After his retirement he was appointed professor emeritus of economics at San Francisco State University, and he died in California in 1994.

His final book was the second volume of the series – War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration – which was published posthumously in 2001 after editing by his daughter Neda. It focused on collaboration and the quisling governments in Yugoslavia during the war with a strong emphasis on the Axis puppet state, the so-called Independent State of Croatia. The book was highly praised by historians. The third volume on the Yugoslav Partisans remains unpublished despite being 75 per cent complete at his death. The scholarly standard Tomasevich achieved with the first two volumes in the series made his death before completing the series "a tragedy keenly felt even by those who never knew him", according to Klaus Schmider, the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst lecturer and German historian. In an obituary written by Vucinich, Tomasevich was described as "a master of scholarly skills, a person of bountiful erudition, wit and human dignity".


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