Béla Greskovits - Civic Activism, Economic Nationalism, and Welfare for the Better-Off: Pillars of Hungary’s Illiberal State

Wann: Donnerstag, 17. Jänner 2019, 17:00 Uhr. Wo: Hörsaal 2, Tiefparterre Hauptgebäude, Stiege 5 Hof 3 Universitätsring 1, 1010 Wien. Vortrag von Béla Greskovits (Central European University) im Rahmen der IPW Lectures, einer internationalen Vortragsreihe des Instituts für Politikwissenschaft, Universität Wien.

Einladung zur IPW Lecture Civic Activism, Economic Nationalism, and Welfare for the Better-Off: Pillars of Hungary’s Illiberal State.

Vortragender: Béla Greskovits (Central European University)
Moderation: Tatiana Zhurzhenko (Institut für Politikwissenschaft, Universität Wien)

Wann: Donnerstag, 17. Jänner 2019, 17:00 Uhr
Wo: Hörsaal 2, Tiefparterre Hauptgebäude, Stiege 5 Hof 3 Universitätsring 1, 1010 Wien

Abstract:
Explaining the remarkable political success of Premier Viktor Orbán’s illiberal state, the presentation makes two arguments. First, this success is traced to the Hungarian right’s superior embeddedness in civil society. Founded by Orbán in 2002, the Civic Circles Movement mobilized all fractions of the right to catch up in terms of contentious and non-contentious civic activism with the left and liberals. After eight years in opposition, the accumulated social capital turned into political capital leading to a landslide victory of the Fidesz party at the 2010 elections, and helping the consolidation of illiberal rule ever since. Second, after 2010, the resilience of Fidesz in power is also supported by its hybrid strategy of mobilizing consent of the „haves” internally, and satisfying veto-players externally. This strategy combines noisy rhetorics and policies of change with quiet policies of continuity. It rebalances cautious economic nationalism and neoliberalism; welfare protection for the „haves” and workfare for the „have-nots”; and buys time for enduring political dominance at present at the price of erosion of competititve advantages in future.

Eine Veranstaltung im Rahmen der IPW Lectures, einer internationalen Vortragsreihe des Instituts für Politikwissenschaft, Universität Wien.

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