
Republika has been published intermittently since the early nineties. It has been a voice of the peace and civic movement in Serbia (the Association for Yugoslav Democratic Initiative) during the war. Republika declares itself as the "Journal of civic self-liberation" and the "Journal with no hatred and scandals". It is consistently anti-war oriented. At present it is a bi-weekly which covers political and cultural topics. In Serbian.
- An Insider Look at November 1996 Elections in Serbia and Montenegro: opposition representative about the organization of the most recent elections in FR Yugoslavia, March 1, 1997
- Participation of Minorities in Political Life in FR Yugoslavia: Albanians, Muslims and Hungarians, their political demands, strategy, parties, July, 1997
- Faith: Nebojsa Popov, Republika's editor-in-chief, on the NATO attack on Yugoslavia, April 1-15 1999
- Democracy Against Force: on the eve of the NATO intervention against Yugoslavia, the Serbian parliament held a debate about the imminent war. Representative Ms. Milena Andric, from the Democratic Alternative, condemned Milosevic and his policies, and called for a compromise in order to avoid the war, April 1-15 1999
- Letter to a Serb Patriot, April 16-30 1999
- I Want to be a Free Man, Srdjan Milivojevic (Otpor), September 1-15 2000
- Culture, Nation and Territory, Ivan Colovic's paper on Serb nationalists' "Kulturkampf", 7/1/2002
- Evil Spirit Of Milosevic's Yugoslavism, Dejan Jovic confronts criticism of his book on the break up of Yugoslavia, 11/1/2003