Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Arts
Abbreviation | CANU |
---|---|
Formation | 1973 |
Type | National academy |
Purpose | Science, arts, academics |
Headquarters | Podgorica, Montenegro |
Location | |
Membership | 31 full members (as of May 2011) |
Dragan Vukčević | |
Affiliations | ICSU |
Website | canu.org.me |
Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Arts (Montenegrin: Црногорска академија наука и умјетности; Crnogorska akademija nauka i umjetnosti or CANU) is the most important scientific institution of Montenegro.
It was founded in 1973 as the Montenegrin Society for Science and Arts (Crnogorsko društvo za nauku i umjetnost) and adopted its current name in 1976. It currently has 40 members (academicians) in three departments: natural sciences, humanities and arts.
The CANU has often been considered and described as a pro-Serbian institution in Montenegro, as the academy' posits the Serb ethnic origin of the Montenegrins. In opposition to this, a splinter group of intellectuals had formed the Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts (DANU) in 1997, registered as a non-governmental organization, in an attempt to counter the official pro-Serbian academy.
Amid the constitutional reforms of 2007 CANU had resisted the standardization of the Montenegrin language supporting the interpretation according to which Montenegrin is a dialect of the Serbian language.[1] Some of CANU's prominent members have actively participated in the campaign against Montenegro's independence in the 2006 independence referendum. CANU president Momir Đurović had in 2007 maintained contacts with members of the pro-Serbian political opposition, and had visited the headquarters of the Serb People's Party and its leader Andrija Mandić during the negotiations on language-naming in the new constitution. The Academy has also criticized Montenegrin government's decision to recognize Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence.
However, in 2015 DANU was merged into CANU, as all of its active members were accepted into membership and DANU was consequently disbanded, with CANU remaining the sole official scientific institution in Montenegro.[2]
Its membership has included:
- Painters Vojo Stanić, Milos Vusković and Aleksandar Prijić,
- Oscar-winning animator Dušan Vukotić,
- Writers Mihailo Lalić, Radovan Zogović and Ćamil Sijarić,
- Art historian Pavle Mijović
- Physicist Dragiša Ivanović.
List of presidents of the Montenegrin Academy of Arts and Sciences:
- Historian Branko Pavićević (born 1922) (1973–1981),
- Economist Branislav Šoškić (born 1922) (1981–1985),
- Economist Mirčeta Ðurović (born 1924) (1985–1989),
- Surgeon Dragutin Vukotić (born 1924) (1989–2001),
- Engineer Momir Ðurović (born 1941) (2002-2016)
- Jurist Dragan Vukčević (born 1958) (2016-present)
Members
Department of Natural Sciences
Regular members
- Ranislav Bulatović
- Momir Đurović
- Milojica Jaćimović
- Gordan Karaman
- Vlado Lubarda
- Milorad Mijušković
- Ljubiša Stanković (Vice-President)
- Milinko Šaranović
- Vučina Šćekić
- Perko Vukotić
- Dragan Vukotić
- Petar Vukoslavčević
- Slobodan Backović
- Svetomir Ivanović
Extraordinary members
- Predrag Miranović
- Goran Nikolić
- Igor Đurović
- Svjetlana Terzić
Correspondent members
- Ljubomir Berberović
- Milan Dragović
- George Duka
- Boris Gusev
- Farudin Hodža
- Dušan Kosović
- Veselin Perić
- Ljubiša Rakić
- Viktor Antonovič Sadovničij
- Ivo Šlaus
- Felix Unger
Department of Social Sciences
Regular members
- Miomir Dašić
- Zoran Lakić
- Dragutin Leković
- Branko Pavićević
- Vlado Strugar
- Branislav Šoškić
- Petar Vlahović
- Dragan K. Vukčević (President)
- Momčilo Zečević
- Milica Kostić
- Dragan Radonjić (Secretary General)
- Đorđe Borozan (Vice-President)
Extraordinary members
- Zoran Rašović
- Veselin Vukotić
Correspondent members
- Ljubiša Adamovič
- Andrej Mitrović
- Anatolij Pantelejevič Derevjenko
- Peter Drent
- Milorad Ekmečić
- Džangir Abasović Kerimov
- Evangelos Mucopulos
- Evgenij Ljvovič Nemirovski
- Slobodan Perović
- Radovan Vukadinović
- Jaime Gil Aluja
Department of Arts
Regular members
- Žarko Đurović
- Dragan Karadžić
- Anka Burić
- Branislav Ostojić
- Olga Perović
- Vojislav Stanić
- Rajko Vujičić
- Čedo Vuković
Extraordinary members
- Nenad Vuković
- Pavle Pejović
- Niko Martinović
- Žarko Mirković
- Zuvdija Hodžić
Correspondent members
- Marko Mušić
- Cvetan Grozdanov
- Radomir Ivanović
- Petar Omčikus
- Asim Peco
- Milivoj Solar