[2] After the end of the First World War in 1918, Serbia, and State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (parts under the Austro-Hungarian rule) united to form the new Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
After the unification of Yugoslavia, there was a need to unite the separate women's movement and coordinate them in the new state.
[3] It published its own magazine; the Gazette of the Yugoslav Women's Union (Glasnik Jugoslovenskog Ženskog Saveza, 1935–40).
When the Communist takeover resulted in a declaration of equality between men and women, and all legal discrimination was removed in the new constitution of 1946, all the legal changes the Yugoslav Women's Alliance had advocated for were achieved without their participation in the creation of the constitution.
The Yugoslav Women's Alliance essentially ended their activity in 1946, though they were not formally dissolved until 1961.