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In the last episode of 2019, we look at the state of play in the judiciary in Hungary and what the most recent amendments mean for rule of law and the independence of the court system. To make sense of it all, we are joined by Dávid Vig, the director of Amnesty International Hungary and Ágnes Kovács, a lecturer at ELTE’s Department of Human Rights and Politics.
History minute: The history of courts in Hungary
Resources:
A Constitutional Crisis in the Hungarian Judiciary, Joint report by Amnesty International Hungary & Hungarian Helsinki Committee, 10 July 2019
Nothing ever disappears, it only changes: The Hungarian Government switches to higher gear to curb judicial independence, Amnesty International Hungary, 19 November 2019
Orban’s New Judicial Overhaul Prompts Rule-of-Law Concerns Again, Zoltan Simon, Bloomberg, 16 November 2019
The fragility of an independent judiciary: Lessons from Hungary and Poland — And the European Union, Kriszta Kovács & Kim Lane Scheppele, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, Vol. 51, Issue 3, September 2018
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This episode is a forward-looking one, which builds on our previous discussion about the economic legacy of the transition. We discuss a new report from Visegrad Insight titled “European Futures,” the current state of EU budget negotiations when it comes to Central Europe, and the impact of regional politics on the economy.
Guests: Daniel Gros, director of CEPS; Wojciech Przybylski, editor-in-chief of Visegrad Insight; and Tomasz Kaszprowicz, economic editor of Res Publica
Resources:
#European Futures: Scenarios for cohesive growth, CEPS and Visegrad Insight, October 2019
EU Expenditure and Revenue 2014–2020, European Union
Money Talks: EU Budget Negotiations Widen East and West Divide, Balkan Insight, 13 November 2019
The EU’s budget tribes explained, Politico Europe, 4 November 2019
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Fehlende Folgen?
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In this episode we talk to Dóra Győrffy, a professor at the Pázmány Péter Catholic University in Hungary, about the economic legacy of the transition. We take stock of the frontrunners and those who did things by the book implementing neoliberal reforms, but we also touch on the failures, and the apparent decoupling of political and economic success.
Resources:
Trust and Crisis Management in the European Union, Dóra Győrffy, Palgrave Macmillan, 2018
From Democratic Dissatisfaction to Financial Crisis, Dóra Győrffy,
In: Jensen, J; Miszlivetz, F (eds.) Reframing Europe’s future : challenges and failures of the European construction, Routledge, 2015, pp. 93–114Huge wage rises signal new phase in Central Europe’s economic transformation, Ben Hall, The Financial Times, 16 October 2019
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This episode is the first segment of a two-part series with Talk Eastern Europe (TEE) on the results of the European Parliament elections in Central Europe. We talk to Edit Zgut, a visiting lecturer at the Center for Europe in the University of Warsaw and discuss the V4 and what is next for the opposition in Hungary and Poland. Stay tuned for part two on Bulgaria, Romania, and more Poland with TEE!
History minute: The Left That’s Not There — Social Democratic Parties in Central Europe
Resources:
2019 Election Results, European Parliament
Why Brussels Overlooks Central Europeans for Top EU Jobs, Edit Zgut, Politico Europe, 21 May 2019
End of the Third Way, Marcin Zaborowski & Wojciech Przybylski, Visegrad Insight, 27 May 2019
Talk Eastern Europe, New Eastern Europe, 2019
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Progressive newcomer Zuzana Caputova secured a surprise victory in Slovakia’s presidential elections this past weekend. We talk about what led to her success and what it means for the future of the country with Oľga Gyárfášova, the director of the Institute of European Studies and International Relations at Comenius University in Bratislava.
History minute: Presidents and their Powers
Resources:
The Winter of Our Discontent, Olga Gyarfasova, Visegrad Insight, 27 April 2018
Can Zuzana Caputova Save Slovakia, Dariusz Kalan, Foreign Policy, 28 March 2019
Hailed by Liberals, Slovakia’s First Female President is Under a Lot of Pressure to Turn the of Populism, Emily Tamkin, Washington Post, 1 April 2019
The Fourth Generation: From Anti-Establishment to Anti-System Parties in Slovakia, Olga Gyarfasova, New Perspectives, Volume 26, Nr. 1/2018
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We’re back! Here with us today is Marius Dragomir, the director of the Center for Media, Data, and Society at Central European University (CEU) and we discuss the crisis-ridden media environment in the region. Despite the doom and gloom around the failure of the old business model and increasing political control, there are some good examples emerging that provide reason for optimism.
History minute: Media Pluralism in an Authoritarian Regime
Resources:
Media Influence Matrix, Center for Media, Data, and Society, CEU, 2019
Control the money, control the media: How the government uses funding to keep media in line, Marius Dragomir, Journalism, Vol. 19, Issue 8, 2018
The Free Press Under Threat in Central Europe, Lenka Kabrhelova, Nieman Lab for Journalism, 27 February 2019
Media in Central Europe: From independent observer to political tool and the new enemy, Zselyke Csaky, Visegrad Insight, December 2017
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In a long-awaited episode we tackle the important question of energy security in the Central European region. For this, we talk to András György Deák, senior fellow at the Institute of World Economy of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and a former consultant to several large energy companies in the region.
History minute: The Function of the Economic Clout
Resources:
Energy, Russian Influence, and Democratic Backsliding in Central and Eastern Europe, Expert Forum / NED, May 2017
Eastern Europe is trying to break its dependence on Russian gas. Western Europe is doing the opposite, Rick Noack, The Washington Post, October 2018
The Trojan Horse of Russian Gas, David Koranyi, Foreign Policy, February 2018
The Failure of Economic Nationalism. Central and Eastern Europe before World War II, Ivan T. Berendt, Révue Économique, Année 2000, 51–2, pp. 315–322
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In this episode we discuss a new report titled Central European Futures — Five Scenarios for 2025 that maps five possible futures for the region and offers insight as well as recommendations. A true discussion starter! The guests on the show are Joerg Forbrig, a director and senior transatlantic fellow at the German Marshall Fund and Wojciech Przybylski, the editor in chief of Visegrad Insight.
History Minute: The Strange Case of Hybrid Alignments
Resources:
Central European Futures — Five Scenarios for 2025, Visegrad Insight, 2018
Recommended podcast:
Talk Eastern Europe, New Eastern Europe, 2018
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We talk to Aljaž Pengov Bitenc, a Slovenian journalist and fellow podcast host in this episode and navigate the not-so-choppy waters of Slovenian politics together. We talk about the outcome of the recent elections, the failure of Orbanization, the lack of illusions but also extremes, and many more.
History minute: The Ambiguity of National History
Resources:
Sleeping with Pengovsky: A blog on Slovenian politics
To Understand What Just Happened in Slovenia, You Have to Go Back to Donald Trump and Roseanne Barr, Slavoj Žižek, The Independent, 4 June 2018
Slovenia Lawmakers Buck the Trend in Central Europe, Endorsing a Centre-Left Government, Associated Press, 13 September 2018
Slovenia, Nations in Transit, 2018
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We’re back! In this episode we are talking to Milan Nič, a senior fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations. We discuss what has happened in Slovakia since the horrific murder of investigative journalist Ján Kuciak and his fiancé this spring, how much influence does Russia have in the country, and where Slovak politics is going once former prime minister Robert Fico decides to fully retire.
History Minute: Traditions of Russophobia and Russophilia in the Region
Resources:
Select publications, Milan Nič, German Council on Foreign Relations
Slovakia Tries to Mask its Oligarchic Democracy with Strong EU Ties, Dariusz Kalan, World Politics Review, 6 November 2017
Six Months after the Murder of Jan Kuciak his Killers Still Enjoy Impunity, Ifex, 21 August 2018
Slovakia, Nations in Transit 2018, Freedom House
Testing Democratic Resolve in Slovakia in: Sharp Power: Rising Authoritarian Influence, Chapter 5, National Endowment for Democracy, 2017
Euro-Orientalism: Liberal Ideology and the Image of Russia in France (c. 1740−1880), Ezequiel Adamovsky, Oxford: Peter Lang, 2006
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We talk to Zsuzsanna Szelényi, an independent MP in the outgoing Hungarian parliament to make sense of Fidesz’s third supermajority and explore the future trajectory of Hungary’s politics.
History Minute: Gramsci and the Rural Vote in Hungarian History
Resources:
Can Viktor Orban be Defeated on April 8?, Zsuzsanna Szelényi, Visegrad Insight, 2 April 2018
Viktor Orban is Just Getting Started, Zselyke Csaky, Foreign Policy, 12 April 2018
Orban Reloaded, Milan Nic & Peter Krekó, DGAP, 11 April 2018
Some Aspects of the Southern Question, Antonio Gramsci, 1926
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In this special episode we bring you an extended history minute. Gábor Egry, a historian at the Institute for Political History in Budapest is our guide as we try to construct a more nuanced interpretation of the current Polish memory row and touch on nation building and history building in Romania and Hungary.
Resources:
Seven Circles of European Memory, Claus Leggewie, 20 December 2010, Eurozine
Holocaust Memory and the Logic of Comparison, Heidemarie Uhl, 20 April 2017, European Network of Remembrance and Solidarity
Gábor Egry, Institute of Political History
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Welcome to 2018! In this episode we look back at the tumultuous events of last year and discuss what 2018 has in store for the region. Our guest is Tsveta Petrova, faculty at the European Institute at Columbia University, where she teaches and advises the MA students in European History, Politics, and Society.
History minute: The EU — an organization for democracies, not for democracy promotion
Resources:
Freedom in the World 2018: Democracy in Crisis, Freedom House, 2018
How Democracy Dies (in Poland): A Case Study of Anticonstitutional Populist Backsliding, Wojciech Sadurski, Sydney Law School Research Paper №18/1
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This is a special episode that features a discussion and review of two books about contemporary Hungarian politics. In the first half, we tackle veteran journalist Paul Lendvai’s new book about Viktor Orbán, while in the second half, we discuss the system that Orbán has built up since 2010 with András Lászlo Pap, a constitutional scholar and research chair at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
History minute: The agent-structure problem in democratic backsliding
Resources:
Orbán: Europe’s New Strongman, Paul Lendvai, Hurst Publishers, 2017
Democratic Decline in Hungary: Law and Society in an Illiberal Democracy, András L. Pap, Routledge, 2017
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In this episode, we talk with Balázs Váradi, an economist and cofounder at the Budapest Institute for Policy Analysis and we discuss the (obscure) funding mechanisms of the European Union and their use and abuse. While corruption has always been an issue with cohesion funds, Brexit and the looming reform of the union could fundamentally change these mechanisms in the long term.
History minute: Backwardness and its historical context
Resources:
The impact of cohesion policy on corruption and political favoritism, Budapest Institute, Anita Győrfi, Tamás Molnár, Petra Reszkető, Balázs Váradi, 31 August, 2016
EU funds in Central and Eastern Europe: Progress Report 2007–2015, KPMG, 2016
Overview of funding programs, European Commission
Tying EU funds to politics could be double-edged, Eszter Zalan, EUObserver, 24 October 2017
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The Czech elections have brought a number of smaller and bigger surprises over the weekend, including the comfortable victory of a billionaire businessman and the rise of antiestablishment parties. In this episode, we talk to Michael Colborne, a journalist based in Prague, and Sean Hanley, a senior lecturer at University College London (UCL). We ask them about the mood in Prague and implications for the trajectory of Czech democracy.
History minute: The East Central European Pendulum
Resources:
Final election results, Idnes.cz, 22 October 2017
Czech election preview: Is Andrej Babis heading for a Pyrrhic Victory?, Sean Hanley, LSE EUROPP Blog, 16 October 2017
The expected surprise of Czech elections, Martin Ehl, Visegrad Insight, 22 October 2017
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We tackle the Visegrad Four cooperation in this episode, talking about its past, present, and future with Wojciech Przybylski, the editor in chief of Visegrad Insight and chairman of Res Publica Nowa. The V4 group made up of Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia has received much attention since the European migration crisis broke out in 2015. This attention, however, might have overshadowed the fact that Visegrad has often found it hard to stake out common positions and that its role, in a coming potential multi-speed Europe, could be upended even more.
History minute: Why Central Europe matters — at least for Central Europeans
Resources:
History of the Visegrad Group, Visegrad Group official website
Vote Splitting in the V4, VoteWatch Europe, Visegrad Insight, 15 May 2017
Public Opinion Poll on Crucial V4 Issues, Nézőpont Intézet, 14 September 2017
Unity of Central Europe’s Visegrad Group under Strain, Lili Bayer, Politico Europe, 31 August 2017
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In this episode we talk about corruption trends and the trajectory of the anticorruption fight in Romania with Laura Stefan, an anticorruption expert with the Romanian think tank Expert Forum. Laura tells us about the incentives in Romania’s political system that sustain corruption and the potential problems stemming from the use of criminal law to tackle an ultimately political issue.
History minute: Historical determinism meets norm entrepreneurship
Resources:
Romania’s Protests: A Response to a Three-Pronged Assault on Anti-Corruption Measures, Daniel Brett, LSE EUROPP Blog, 2 February 2017
Populism 2.0 and the Rebirth of Alternatives to Liberal Democracy, annual report, Expert Forum, 2017
Questions and Answers on Romania’s Anticorruption Implosion, Alina Mungiu-Pippidi, European Center for Anticorruption and State Building, 2017
Romania, Nations in Transit 2017 country report, Freedom House, 2017
Bacalaureat [Graduation], Cristian Mungiu, 2016
De Ce Eu [Why Me?], Tudor Giurgiu, 2015
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We tackle propaganda, fake news, and numbers in general in this episode. For this enormous task, we talk to freelance Canadian journalist Michael Colborne, who is currently based in Prague and has written for Coda Story, Al-Jazeera, CBC, and others.
History minute: Traditions of mistrust and distrust in East Central Europe
Resources:
Surveying Some Surveys: Czech & Refugees, Immigrants and Islam, Michael Colborne, 27 April 2017
A Lesson on How Not to Fight Disinformation, Michael Colborne, 11 June 2017
Globsec Trends 2017: Mixed Messages and Signs of Hope from Central and Eastern Europe, Globsec, May 2017
Document: Russia Uses Rigged Polls, Fake News to Sway Foreign Elections, Joe Parkinson & Georgi Kantchev, WSJ, 23 March 2017
Standard Eurobarometer 87, May 2017
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This is the second part of In Between Europe’s explainer on what is happening to the independent judiciary in Poland with Christian Davies of the Guardian. In part I, we looked at the big picture, while in this episode we go down the nitty-gritty of laws and the main ideas around democracy and separation of powers.
History minute: The Failure of Democratic Processes in Interwar Poland in PartI
Resources:
The conspiracy theorists who have taken over Poland, Christian Davies, The Guardian, 16 February 2016
How to Demolish and Independent Judiciary with the Help of a Constitutional Court, Marcin Matczak, Verfassungsblog, 23 June 2017
Poland and the European Commission, Part III, Laurent Pech & Kim Lane Scheppele, Verfassungsblog, 3 March 2017
Winter in Warsaw, Annabelle Chapman, The Spectator, 21 July 2016
Poland: Some Hope in the Midst of Chaos, Zselyke Csaky, Freedom at Issue, 19 December 2016
God’s Playground: A History of Poland, Norman Davies, Oxford University Press, 1981
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