Homogeneous Serbia is a written discourse by Stevan MoljeviÃÂ. The work emphasized that the Serbian state drew its strength from the degree to which its population identifies itself within the state, contrary to the presumptions of Ilija Garaà ¡anin, who believed that the strength of the state is derived from its size and organizational principles. Moljeviàbelieved that the victorious Kingdom of Serbia in 1918 made a grave mistake when it decided to establish Yugoslavia instead of clearly defining the borders of Serbia.
Right after the collapse of Yugoslavia during the short Axis invasion, in which MoljeviÃÂ created the concept of "homogeneous" Serbia and trialist Yugoslavia. The map presented in this work awards territory of northern Dalmatia with substantial Serb population to Croatia.
Moljeviàwrote another treatise titled An Opinion About Our State and Its Borders (), which he presented to Dragià ¡a Vasiàalong with Homogeneous Serbia.
John R. Lampe pointed to significant details that undercut the perception of MoljeviÃÂ's Homogeneous Serbia being the centerpiece of a coherent set of Chetnik war objectives, such as that the Central National Committee had secondary status while MoljeviÃÂ did not rise to prominence in this committee until 1943. There is no proof that massacres of Muslims committed by Chetniks were a direct consequence of MoljeviÃÂ's tract, bearing in mind that Chetnik leader MihailoviÃÂ's fragmented and very weak command structure militated against any systematic annihilation programme.