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2020, Public Seminar
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https://publicseminar.org/essays/orbanistan/
Intersections, 2021
The European Conservative, 2022
Illiberal democracy, as understood by Viktor Orbán, is much less ambitious and more prosaic than his critics portray it. It is simply having the vision of society, human beings, and the world from an ancient, nonliberal perspective and daring to implement it. It means a communitarian, personalist understanding of political community, in which liberal core values are important, but they are applied within — and limited by — a conservative framework.
OSW Commentary, 2022
Upon attaining a fourth consecutive election victory, Viktor Orbán’s new government is sticking to its usual methods of operation: the concentration of power, control of the narrative, and ‘unorthodox’ economic policies, such as additional taxation on large profits. The cabinet functions in comfortable intra-political conditions, holding full power and facing a defeated and divided opposition. However, it faces its biggest challenges in years with the deteriorating economic situation and the unstable international environment. The government has no clear reform aspirations and is rather promising to manage the crisis permanently, while looking after its business base and further tightening its grip on media coverage. In view of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, it will be increasingly difficult for Budapest to benefit from balancing between East and West. In this area, it is likely to attempt a rapprochement with the Western states that are more accommodating towards Moscow, while at the same time looking for ways to maintain the relations with the US and its partners in Central Europe, albeit these are the frostiest they have been in decades. Orbán is trying to postpone a reorientation in foreign policy until the result of the Russian-Ukrainian war is known. Should the West return to dialogue with Russia, he is counting on the benefits of a developed cooperation with the Kremlin, especially in the energy sector and, should Russia enter into a situation of protracted isolation, Orbán will seek to ensure that any reduction in this cooperation will see Hungary amply compensated by its Western partners.
Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, 2011
Banatul azi, 2017
This essay, published in three parts in successive issues of Banatul Azi, tried to point out the main milestones of Viktor Orban's political career, starting with the almost mythical moment held in Heroes' Square, Budapest, June 1989, on the occasion of rehabilitation and reburial of Imre Nagy and his "group", passing through the first mandate in power, through the pitfalls of the opposition and culminating with Orban s return to power. Important to notice is the evolution of his position towards liberalism, the European Union and the political opposition in the country, the formation of his political speech and the strength with which he learned to support his views despite and even against everyone. The text ends with an inventory of the "people s enemies" topped by George Soros, as well as the instruments used by the Orban regime to silence their voices.
This article examines the relationship between the dynamics of state-building and the function of the international community in the case of Transdniestria, the eastern region of Moldova. It looks in particular at the practices that local authorities use in promoting Moldovan statehood in the international arena. The Transdniestrian state-building project has been characterised by virtual means such as the Internet and by simulation that aim to produce the ‘symptoms’ of democracy in order to legitimise the claim to statehood. It is argued that these symptoms cannot be understood without reference to the international community, which in the case of Transdniestria serves as a normative framework for the process of state-building and leads to simulations of democracy in the de facto state.
opposing features from various traditions through two strategies: representation, which allowed it to incorporate citizens’ conflicting interests within a restricted collegiate group that permitted deliberation and agreement, on one side, and universal choice of representatives and governments for limited periods of time, on the other. Since the first decades of the 20th century, this notion of democracy within the framework of a republican constitution was opposed by another one that rejected all forms of parliamentarianism, discussion and public deliberation in the name of a “democracy” based on the identity and homogeneity of a mass of people under the hegemonic leadership of a party, centered around the will and decisions of a managing elite and a charismatic leader, viewed as the sole representative of the people themselves. Both forms of democracy –strict and perverted – are being harassed by the powers unleashed by globalization and transnationalisation that are becoming alien oligarchies, opposed to the notion of citizenship and restrictive of its rights. In liberal parliamentary democracies the functional imperative issued by the financial sector is channeled through a crisis cabinet that assimilates demands and transforms them by managing an everchanging budget whose aim is to add new sufferings to the bulk of the population that can only counteract through protest. Given the constitutional backdrop of these societies, with their deep democratic network, the gradual transformation of the European Union into a transnational arena fuelled by “a club of chiefs of state” has only made yet more patent the oligarchic turn of its post-crisis evolution. In plebiscite democracies the turn was operated through a sovereign entrenchment of the power of the oligarchy on the pretext of resistance to the pressure set by globalization. Since the onset of the 90s, Latin America as well as countries in Eastern Europe have witnessed a gradual turn toward what O’Donnell has termed “delegative democracies”, or neo-populism, according to other authors. These regimes are characterized by exalting a populist leader, upholding him as a savior who will gauge the needs and wishes of the mass of individuals without intermediaries, focusing mainly on those who feel excluded from the mainstream of institutionalized democracy. This ensures feedback to populist regimes supported by a hegemonic political party that lives on State resources and on the rampant corruption it protects in order to finance ‘clientelism’ among those excluded from the system by the policies of the State itself. Key words: Democracy – Oligarchy – Globalization – Finantial Capitalism – Crisis – Populism
Gebändigte Macht: Verfassung im europäischen Nationalstaat, 2015
This is a short piece about the 2018 re-election of Viktor Orban in Hungary and the nature of his increasingly authoritarian rule.
Preprints, 2024
Anais do 33° Encontro Anual da COMPÓS, 2024
Routledge Press, 2024
in Revista da AJURIS - Porto Alegre, v. 47, n. 149, Dezembro 2020
El-Furqania : Jurnal Ushuluddin dan Ilmu-Ilmu Keislaman, 2020
Malaysian Naturalist, 2022
Nutrition and Food Processing
Eskiyeni, 2024
Analytical Chemistry, 2020
International Journal of Biomedical Science
IEEE Sensors Journal, 2016
Arthroscopy: The Journal of Arthroscopic & Related Surgery, 2013
A BRASILIZAÇÃO DO MUNDO., 2024
Managing Forest Ecosystems, 2013
Multisystemic Resilience, 2021