Ministry of Culture and Information (Serbia)
Министарство културе Ministarstvo kulture | |
Ministry overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 11 February 1991 |
Jurisdiction | Government of Serbia |
Headquarters | Vlajkovićeva 3, Belgrade, Serbia 44°48′45.1″N 20°27′51.2″E / 44.812528°N 20.464222°E |
Employees | 76 (2017)[1] |
Annual budget | €112.98 million (2020, planned)[2] |
Minister responsible | |
Website | www |
Serbia portal |
The Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Serbia (Serbian: Министарство културе, romanized: Ministarstvo kulture) is the ministry in the Government of Serbia which is in the charge of culture and information. The current minister is Nikola Selaković, in office since 2 May 2024.
History
[edit]The Ministry of Culture was established on 11 February 1991.
The Ministry of Information was merged into the Ministry of Culture in 2001.
The Ministry of Telecommunications and Information Society was merged into the Ministry of Culture, Information, and Informational Society in 2011. The Ministry of Religion and Diaspora which existed from 1991 to 2012, merged into the Ministry of Culture, Information, and Diaspora in 2012. Also, some of the jurisdictions of the Ministry were passed to the reestablished Ministry of Internal and Foreign Trade, Telecommunications, and Information Society in 2012. Ministry was once again renamed in 2022.
List of ministers
[edit]Political Party: SPS SPO DS G17 Plus SNS n-p
Name (Birth–Death) | Party | Term of Office | Prime Minister (Cabinet) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minister of Culture | ||||||
Radomir Šaranović (1937–2001) | SPS | 11 February 1991 | 23 December 1991 | Zelenović (I) | ||
Miodrag Đukić (1938–2010) | SPS | 23 December 1991 | 10 February 1993 | Božović (I) | ||
Đoko Stojičić (1936–2021) | SPS | 10 February 1993 | 18 March 1994 | Šainović (I) | ||
Nada Popović-Perišić (born 1946) | SPS | 18 March 1994 | 20 August 1998 | Marjanović (I • II) | ||
Željko Simić (born 1958) | SPS | 20 August 1998 | 24 October 2000 | Marjanović (II) | ||
Milan Komnenić (1940–2015) | SPO | 24 October 2000 | 25 January 2001 | Minić (transitional) | ||
Branislav Lečić (born 1955) | DS | 25 January 2001 | 23 May 2002 | Đinđić (I) | ||
Minister of Culture and Public Information | ||||||
Branislav Lečić (born 1955) | DS | 23 May 2002 | 2 April 2003 | Đinđić (I) Živković (I) | ||
Minister of Culture and Media | ||||||
Branislav Lečić (born 1955) | DS | 2 April 2003 | 3 March 2004 | Živković (I) | ||
Minister of Culture | ||||||
Dragan Kojadinović (born 1954) | SPO | 3 March 2004 | 15 May 2007 | Koštunica (I) | ||
Vojislav Brajović (born 1949) | DS | 15 May 2007 | 7 July 2008 | Koštunica (II) | ||
Nebojša Bradić (born 1956) | G17 Plus | 7 July 2008 | 14 March 2011 | Cvetković (I) | ||
Minister of Culture, Information, and Informational Society | ||||||
Predrag Marković (born 1955) | G17 Plus | 14 March 2011 | 27 July 2012 | Cvetković (I) | ||
Minister of Culture, Information, and Diaspora | ||||||
Bratislav Petković (1948–2021) | SNS | 27 July 2012 | 2 September 2013 | Dačić (I) | ||
Ivan Tasovac (1966–2021) | n-p | 2 September 2013 | 27 April 2014 | |||
Minister of Culture and Information | ||||||
Ivan Tasovac (1966–2021) | n-p | 27 April 2014 | 11 August 2016 | Vučić (I) | ||
Vladan Vukosavljević (born 1962) | n-p | 11 August 2016 | 28 October 2020 | Vučić (II) Brnabić (I) | ||
Maja Gojković (born 1963) | SNS | 28 October 2020 | 26 October 2022 | Brnabić (II) | ||
Minister of Culture | ||||||
Maja Gojković (born 1963) | SNS | 26 October 2022 | 2 May 2024 | Brnabić (III) | ||
Nikola Selaković (born 1983) | SNS | 2 May 2024 | Incumbent | Vučević (I) |
See also
[edit]- Ministry of Religion and Diaspora (Serbia)
- Ministry of Information (Serbia)
- Ministry of Religion (Serbia)
- Serbian culture
- Serbian diaspora
- Religion in Serbia
References
[edit]- ^ "Година LXXIII – број 61". pravno-informacioni-sistem.rs (in Serbian). Službeni glasnik RS. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
- ^ "ЗАКОН О БУЏЕТУ РЕПУБЛИКЕ СРБИЈЕ ЗА 2020. ГОДИНУ" (PDF). parlament.gov.rs. Народна скупштина Републике Србије. Retrieved 20 February 2020.