Central Europe Thirty Years after the Fall of Communism: A Return to the Margin?

Sprednja platnica
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, 23. maj 2022 - 236 strani
This book examines the politics and international relations of Central Europe (the Visegrád Four) three decades after the fall of communism. Once bound together by a common geopolitical vision of "returning to the West," the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia now find themselves in a more ambiguous position. The 2015 European migration crisis exposed serious normative differences with Western Europe, leading to a collective V4 rebellion against the European Union's migration policies. At the same time, as this book demonstrates—despite this normative rift with Western Europe and despite the democratic backsliding in some of the V4 states—they remain deeply dependent on the West in both symbolic and material terms. Furthermore, ways in which individual Central European states position themselves vis-a-vis the West exhibit notable differences, informed by their specific political and cultural legacies. The author examines these in separate country chapters. This book also contains a chapter that analyzes the effect of the COVID-19 crisis on political discourses in the V4.
 

Vsebina

Central Europe as a CounterHegemonic Concept
15
The End of Central Europe? The European Migration
39
An Ad Hoc Region On Central Europes Embedded
61
Czech Republic and Slovakia The PostCrisis
81
Poland Heroic Failures and Tragic Resistance
105
Hungary The Freedom Fight of an Ideological
133
The Pandemic Is What the Populists Make of It?
159
the Return to Europe Become a Return to
181
Index
213
Avtorske pravice

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O avtorju (2022)

Aliaksei Kazharski is researcher and lecturer at Charles University in Prague and Comenius University in Bratislava.

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