Ministry of Public Administration and Local Self-Government

The Ministry of Public Administration and Local Self-Government of the Government of Serbia (Serbian: Министарство државне управе и локалне самоуправе, romanized: Ministarstvo državne uprave i lokalne samouprave) is the ministry in the Government of Serbia which is in the charge of public administration and local self-government. The current minister is Branko Ružić, in office since 29 June 2017.

Ministry of Public Administration and Local Self-Government
Министарство државне управе и локалне самоуправе
Ministarstvo državne uprave i lokalne samouprave
Ministry overview
Formed11 February 1997 (1997-02-11)
JurisdictionGovernment of Serbia
HeadquartersBirčaninova Street 6, Belgrade, Serbia
44°48′18.5″N 20°27′29.3″E
Employees106 (2017)[1]
Annual budget14.62 million (2020, planned)[2]
Minister responsible
Deputy Minister responsible
  • Stanija Višekruna
Websitemduls.gov.rs
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History

The Ministry of Public Administration and Local Self-Government was established on 11 February 1997.

2011–14: Merged ministries

In 2011, the Ministry of Public Administration and Local Self-Government was added the Ministry of Human and Minority Rights, and it was named the Ministry of Human and Minority Rights, Public Administration and Local Self-Government until 2012.

From 2012 to 2014, the Public Administration was within the Ministry of Justice and Public Administration under Nikola Selaković. Also, the Local Self-Government became part of the Ministry of Regional Development and Local Self-Government under Verica Kalanović from 2012 to 2013. Regional Development was split from the Ministry of Economy. From 2013 to 2014 Igor Mirović led the Ministry of Regional Development and Local Self-Government.

2014–present: Reunified ministry

In 2014, Kori Udovički took the reunified ministry of Public Administration and Local Self-Government from Selaković and Mirović.

Subordinate agencies

There are several agencies that operate within the Ministry:

List of ministers

Political Party:   SPS   SRS   DSS   DS   G17 Plus / URS   SNS   n-p

Name
(Birth–Death)
Party Term of Office Prime Minister
(Cabinet)
Minister of Public Administration and Local Self-Government
Zoran Modrinić
(1947–)
SPS 11 February 1997 24 March 1998 Marjanović (I)
Gordana Pop-Lazić
(1956–)
SRS 24 March 1998 24 October 2000 Marjanović (II)
Veljko Odalović
(1956–)
SPS 24 October 2000 25 January 2001 Minić (I)
Rodoljub Šabić
(1955–)
SD 13 June 2002 16 October 2003 Đinđić
Živković (I)
Ivica Eždenci Acting
(1969–)
DOS 16 October 2003 3 March 2004 Živković (I)
Zoran Lončar
(1965–)
DSS 3 March 2004 15 May 2007 Koštunica (I, II)
Milan Marković
(1970–)
DS 15 May 2007 14 March 2011 Cvetković (I)
Minister of Human and Minority Rights, Public Administration and Local Self-Government
Milan Marković
(1970–)
DS 14 March 2011 27 July 2012 Cvetković (I)
Minister of Regional Development and Local Self-Government
Verica Kalanović
(1954–)
G17 Plus 27 July 2012 2 September 2013 Dačić (I)
URS
Igor Mirović
(1968–)
SNS 2 September 2013 27 April 2014
Minister of Public Administration and Local Self-Government
Kori Udovički
(1961–)
n-p 27 April 2014 11 August 2016 Vučić (I)
Ana Brnabić
(1975–)
n-p 11 August 2016 29 June 2017 Vučić (II)
Branko Ružić
(1975–)
SPS 29 June 2017 Present Brnabić (I)
gollark: I would probably use nginx, because I'm used to it and it has nicer configuration:```nginxhttp { # whatever important configuration you have for all HTTP servers, `nginx.conf` probably ships with some # fallback in case someone visits with an unrecognized Host header server { listen 80 default_server; listen [::]:80 default_server; return 301 http://somedomain$request_uri; } server { listen 80; # you may (probably do) want HTTPS instead, in which case this bit is somewhat different - you need to deal with certs and stuff, and use port 443 - also you should probably add HTTP/2 listen [::]:80; # IPv6 server_name domain1.com; location / { proxy_pass http://backend1:8080/; } } server { listen 80; listen [::]:80; server_name domain2.com; location / { proxy_pass http://backend2:8080/; } }}```
gollark: The reverse-proxy solution is in my opinion the best one, although it would require some config.
gollark: I think LetsEncrypt may not be very happy with that, though.
gollark: Yes, and you can just use a reverse proxy (with "vhosts" or whatever) for that, easy enough.
gollark: I think those are just what some webservers call "doing different things based on the host header".

References

  1. "Година LXXIII – број 61". pravno-informacioni-sistem.rs (in Serbian). Službeni glasnik RS. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  2. "ЗАКОН О БУЏЕТУ РЕПУБЛИКЕ СРБИЈЕ ЗА 2020. ГОДИНУ" (PDF). parlament.gov.rs. Народна скупштина Републике Србије. Retrieved 20 February 2020.

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