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Original Articles

Fake and Dishonest: Pathologies of Differentiation of the Civil and the Political Sphere in Hungary

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Pages 361-374 | Published online: 21 Oct 2013

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Read on this site (2)

Aron Buzogány, Szabina Kerényi & Gergely Olt. (2022) Back to the grassroots? The shrinking space of environmental activism in illiberal Hungary. Environmental Politics 31:7, pages 1267-1288.
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Pál Susánszky, Akos Kopper & Gergely Tóth. (2016) Pro-government demonstrations in Hungary – citizens’ autonomy and the role of the media. East European Politics 32:1, pages 63-80.
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Articles from other publishers (8)

Sebastian Hellmeier & Michael Bernhard. (2023) Regime Transformation From Below: Mobilization for Democracy and Autocracy From 1900 to 2021. Comparative Political Studies, pages 001041402311527.
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Zeynep Atalay. (2021) The mutual constitution of illiberal civil society and neoauthoritarianism: Evidence from Turkey. Current Sociology 70:3, pages 338-357.
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Noemi Lendvai‐Bainton & Dorota Szelewa. (2020) Governing new authoritarianism: Populism, nationalism and radical welfare reforms in Hungary and Poland. Social Policy & Administration 55:4, pages 559-572.
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László Kürti. (2020) Orbánism: The Culture of Illiberalism in Hungary. Ethnologia Europaea 50:2.
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Ruth Simsa. (2019) Civil Society Capture by Early Stage Autocrats in Well-Developed Democracies – The Case of Austria. Nonprofit Policy Forum 10:3.
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József PoppJudit OláhMiklós FáriPéter BaloghZoltán Lakner. (2018) The GM-regulation game – the case of Hungary. International Food and Agribusiness Management Review 21:7, pages 945-968.
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Zoltán Lakner, Anna Kiss, Ivan Merlet, Judit Oláh, Domicián Máté, Janusz Grabara & József Popp. (2018) Building Coalitions for a Diversified and Sustainable Tourism: Two Case Studies from Hungary. Sustainability 10:4, pages 1090.
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Sebastian Hellmeier & Michael Bernhard. (2022) Mass Mobilization and Regime Change. Evidence From a New Measure of Mobilization for Democracy and Autocracy From 1900 to 2020. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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