Writers' Constitution
The "Writers' Constitution" was an informal draft of a constitution of the Slovene state prepared at the time when unity of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia began to crumble, as an expression of the will of the Slovene nation to self-determine. The text entitled "Gradivo za slovensko ustavo" was published on 15 April 1988 in the journal Časopis za kritiko znanosti and presented ten days later as "Teze za Ustavo Republike Slovenije" at a public event in Cankar Centre, Ljubljana. This text later served as the basis for the current Constitution of Slovenia, therefore the "Writers' Constitution" is regarded one of the pillars of Slovene statehood and one of the key events in the process of gaining independence.
Writing was spurred by the 1987 amendments to the Yugoslav constitution which meant the federation would become highly centralized. In response, the Slovene Writers' Association proposed a new Slovene constitution and formed a constitutional committee which prepared several contributions, later joining forces with the Slovene Sociological Association which formed a working group as well. Members of these bodies were:
| DSP constitutional committee | SSD working group |
Later, the newly formed DEMOS coalition took on the task of finalizing the constitution and prepared a very similar draft. After DEMOS won the 1990 parliamentary election, this draft was taken as a basis by the constitutional committee of the Slovene assembly which finalized the so-called "Podvin Constitution" in August 1990. The coalition intended to adopt it by the end of 1990, but the process was delayed because of the controversies regarding the phrase "sanctity of life" which was taken from the preamble of the Writers' Constitution. After a consensus was reached, the assembly adopted it as the Constitution of the Republic of Slovenia on 23 December 1991.