Raluca Mușat (St Mary's University Twickenham, London), Prototypes for modern living: planning, sociology and the model village in inter-war Romania, „Social History”, Routledge, vol. 40, no. 2, 157-184, 23 Apr 2015, DOI:10.1080/03071022.2015.1014177
(159-60) After the First World War, many model villages were built in south-eastern Europe in particular,
both as solutions to the extensive population transfers, and as part of
state-building initiatives that often involved the re-ordering and
modernization of peasant societies.
39 = D. Gusti, Politica Culturii. 30 de prelegeri și comunicări organizate de Institutul Social Român (Bucharest, 1933), 473–86.
76 = Sibel Bozdogan, Modernism and Nation Building, op. cit., 103–4.
78 = Sibel Bozdogan, Modernism and Nation Building.
(176) Serbian migrant builders had brought the first brick houses to Dioști in the mid-nineteenth century, introducing a new architectural style that copied the urban petty bourgeois architecture of the nearby town of Caracal.