Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 23. Chapters: Croat political parties in Serbia, Croats of Vojvodina, Bunjevci, okci, Ivan Antunovi, FK Ba ka 1901, Oliver Duli, Bla ko Raji, Mirko Vidakovi, Stjepan Horvat, Dejan Godar, Pasko Rakic, Velibor Kopunovi, Rajka Vali, Luka Lipo inovi, Aleksandar Kopunovi, Rajko Ljubi, Croatian Bunjevac- okac Party, Democratic Union of Croats, Mara vel-Garmi ek, Antun Rudinski, Gaja Alaga, Croatian National Alliance, Zvonik, Ana Be li, Democratic Alliance of Croats in Vojvodina, Ivana Duli -Markovi, Petar Peki, Mato Dukovac, Miroljub, Ilija Okrugi, Croatian Syrmian Initiative, Njiva, Dra en Pr i, Nada Ton i, Gra anski Zemun, Gyorgy Sztantics, H K Dunav Zemun, Na e novine, Hrvatska rije . Excerpt: Bunjevci (Serbian: Bunjevci /, singular Bunjevac / (pronounced and ); Hungarian: bunyevacok) are a South Slavic ethnic group living mostly in the Ba ka region of Serbia (province of Vojvodina) and southern Hungary (Bacs-Kiskun county, particularly in the Baja region), as well as in the Dinaric Alps region (Dalmatia, Lika and western Herzegovina). Bunjevci are Roman Catholic. Majority of Bunjevci in Croatia declaring themselves as Croats, while those in Serbia declaring themselves either as separate Bunjevci ethnicity either as Croats or Yugoslavs. There are several theories about origin of their name. The most common is that the name derives from the river Buna in central Herzegovina, their supposed ancestral homeland before their migrations. This etymology was first proposed by Fr. Marijan Lanosovi and supported by Vuk Karad i, Rudolf Horvat, Ivan Ivani, Ivan Antonovi, Istvan Ivanyi, and Mijo Mandi . Another theory is that the name comes from the term Bunja, a traditional vernacular house of the Bunjevac people. Bunjevci migrations (13th-17th...