Following the proposition that civic values are crucial to liberal democracy and conducive to international peace, this book examines the extent to which these values are respected and practised in a number of policy spheres, with chapters devoted to the political system, the media, religion, relations with the European Union, history textbooks, cinema, Roma, and the attitudes of Hungarian women voters. The book also charts how, under Prime Minister Orbán, Hungary has gravitated away from the civic values spelled out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Charter of the European Union.
This book will prove to be of great use to scholars and students of democracy, East Central Europe, minorities, Hungarian contemporary history and politics, civic culture, gender studies, nationalism, human rights, and more broadly the social sciences.
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Rick Fawn, Professor of International Studies, University of St Andrews, UK, and author of Castle on a Hill: The Visegrad Group, Regionalism, and the Remaking of Europe (2024).
"Sabrina Ramet and László Kürti invited scholars to this book from very different fields of social science to deep-drill into the apparently homogeneous texture of the Hungarian society under Orbán's rule. Their choices proved successful. Human rights and their increasingly deplorable situation are revealed in different dimensions, as Orbán's authoritarian system gradually develops and infiltrates into all segments of society. Systemic controversies are analyzed in high-quality studies, be they from a philosophical, legal, institutional, or political science approach on political developments, gender, religion, minority groups, or even individual history."
Maria Csanádi, Professor Emerita, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary, and principal author of Dynamics of an Authoritarian System: Hungary, 2010-2021 (2022).