@article{MTMT:35171755, title = {Competing Visions at the EU’s Edge: Liberal vs. Conservative-Christian Notions of Europe in the Ukrainian–Hungarian Borderland}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/35171755}, author = {Balogh, Péter}, doi = {10.1080/08865655.2024.2382680}, journal-iso = {J BORDERLANDS STUD}, journal = {JOURNAL OF BORDERLANDS STUDIES}, unique-id = {35171755}, issn = {0886-5655}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2159-1229}, orcid-numbers = {Balogh, Péter/0000-0001-8220-3220} } @article{MTMT:34936025, title = {Positioning antagonistic discourses in the (de)bounded spaces of power}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34936025}, author = {Lamour, Christian and Mazzoleni, Oscar}, doi = {10.1075/jlp.23087.lam}, journal-iso = {J LANG POLITICS}, journal = {JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND POLITICS}, volume = {23}, unique-id = {34936025}, issn = {1569-2159}, abstract = {Scholarship has underlined how radical right-wing populism (RRWP) emphasizes border control aiming to protect the “people”. Although increasing attention is being paid to the discursive dimensions of border construction, the complexity of the phenomenon suggests the need for further analysis in an interdisciplinary perspective and with an emphasis on the geometry of spatial powers ( Massey 1999 , 2005 ). Understanding power dynamics in space is all the more important now that radical right-wing populism (RRWP) is becoming a key political phenomenon. The use of the border in right-wing populist narratives draws on the representation of power struggles in space concerning the management of flows (people, goods, services, capital, ideas, values, etc.). The scope of the introduction to this special issue is to address the connection between radical right-wing populism, borders, and spaces of power, and to present the research articles investigating this link through a series of different case studies.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1569-9862}, pages = {307-322}, orcid-numbers = {Lamour, Christian/0000-0001-9571-6228; Mazzoleni, Oscar/0000-0002-2535-613X} } @article{MTMT:34766829, title = {The Ukrainian Refugee Crisis and the Politics of Public Opinion. Evidence from Hungary}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34766829}, author = {Pepinsky, T B and Reiff, Ádám and Szabó, Krisztina}, doi = {10.1017/S1537592724000410}, journal-iso = {PERSPECT POLIT}, journal = {PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS}, unique-id = {34766829}, issn = {1537-5927}, abstract = {The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine was a watershed moment in European politics. The invasion prompted a massive influx of refugees into Central Europe, a region in which immigration has proven highly contentious and politically salient in recent decades. We study public opinion toward refugees in Hungary, a highly exclusionary political environment in which anti-migrant and anti-refugee sentiments are commonly invoked by the ruling government. Combining historical public opinion data from the past decade with two rounds of original survey data from 2022, we demonstrate that the Ukrainian refugee crisis was accompanied by a large increase in tolerance for refugees, reversing what had previously been one of the most anti-refugee public opinion environments in Europe. To explain this reversal, we use a series of survey experiments coupled with detailed settlement-level demographic data to investigate how conflict proximity and racial, religious, and national identity shape openness to refugees. We find that the distinguishing feature of the 2022 refugee crisis was that refugees were mostly white European Christians driven from their home country by conflict. We discuss the implications of our argument for Hungary, for European politics in times of crisis, and for the politics of public opinion in competitive authoritarian regimes.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1541-0986}, orcid-numbers = {Pepinsky, T B/0000-0002-4000-217X} } @article{MTMT:34100349, title = {Hungary’s illiberal border politics and the exploitation of social, spatial and temporal distinctions}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34100349}, author = {Scott, James W.}, doi = {10.1177/09697764231186741}, journal-iso = {EUR URBAN REG STUD}, journal = {EUROPEAN URBAN AND REGIONAL STUDIES}, volume = {31}, unique-id = {34100349}, issn = {0969-7764}, abstract = {Previous research on Hungarian right-wing populism has documented how the present government has identified different groups and individuals as threats to innate national interests and values, drawing distinctions between the ‘nation’, illegal migrants, non-heteronormative persons, liberal enemies in Brussels, George Soros and others. At the same time, the Orbán government has exploited the country’s internal divisions which, for example, reflect long-standing contestations between liberal and conservative understandings of national identity and purpose. Employing a critical border studies perspective, this article explores Hungary’s illiberal practices of socio-cultural, spatial and temporal border-making. These are central to Hungary’s project of ‘illiberal democracy’ and the forging of a political environment that marginalizes alternative viewpoints and that extends into the organization of civil society and everyday life. European dimensions of the Hungarian regime’s border politics are also briefly discussed in terms of evoking liberal-conservative divides and Hungary’s claims for greater national recognition as a defender of Europe’s Christian heritage. In the concluding section, the potential significance of Hungarian illiberal politics in terms of an erosion of social cohesion both nationally and within the European Union will be considered.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1461-7145}, pages = {14-28}, orcid-numbers = {Scott, James W./0000-0001-6092-9784} } @article{MTMT:34847909, title = {Border-making as illiberal politics. examples from Orban’s Hungary and Trump’s America}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34847909}, author = {Scott, James W.}, doi = {10.1075/jlp.23089.sco}, journal-iso = {J LANG POLITICS}, journal = {JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND POLITICS}, volume = {23}, unique-id = {34847909}, issn = {1569-2159}, abstract = {Radical Right-wing populism frequently involves ‘divide and rule’ strategies as a means to attain and consolidate political power. In the cases of Viktor Orban’s political regime in Hungary and Donald Trump’s four-year presidency (and its aftermath), we find a pronounced attempt to create narrative hegemony of a sense of nation built upon Christian civilization and foundationalist understandings of national identity. Moreover, both cases reveal processes of social border-making that are reflected in norming and the creation of distinctions based on degrees of national authenticity. Applying an ontological security and critical borders studies approach, this paper will specifically focus on the different ways in which border-making processes, or bordering, are implicated in the exercise of illiberal political power in the Hungarian and US cases. Despite many similarities, the actual mobilization of popular support reflects local conditions and has resulted in rather different political outcomes.}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1569-9862}, pages = {416-437}, orcid-numbers = {Scott, James W./0000-0001-6092-9784} } @article{MTMT:34780928, title = {Bordering and crisis narratives to illiberal ends. The politics of reassurance in Viktor Orbán’s Hungary}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34780928}, author = {Szalai, András}, doi = {10.1075/jlp.23086.sza}, journal-iso = {J LANG POLITICS}, journal = {JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND POLITICS}, volume = {23}, unique-id = {34780928}, issn = {1569-2159}, abstract = {This paper draws lessons from security and populism studies to theorize how radical right-wing populism (RRWP)utilizes borders as a symbolic resource in crisis narratives to clearly frame an “Us” and a threatening “Them”. By analyzing theHungarian Orbán regime’s evolving rhetoric on borders, the paper illustrates how populists employ crisis narratives not tomitigate, but exacerbate ontological insecurities, and thereby facilitate de-democratization by (re)shaping voter attitudes (cf. Homolar & Scholz 2019 ; Steele & Homolar2019 ). The paper suggests that populists-in-power rely on crisis and bordering narratives beyond voter mobilization:such narratives are in fact designed to legitimize and affirm illiberal practices that undermine liberal democracy itself, andcontribute to regime building. Border crises, and crisis politics, hence become a template for the manipulation of individuals’security-of-being, and thereby a tool in the politics of reassurance and control at the broader, societal level.}, keywords = {Hungary; MIGRATION; Populism; de-democratization; Bordering; crisis narratives}, year = {2024}, eissn = {1569-9862}, pages = {391-415}, orcid-numbers = {Szalai, András/0000-0003-0015-8572} } @article{MTMT:34969776, title = {Wall-building policy: nationalist space management and borderphobia as right-wing populists' tools for doing authoritarian politics}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34969776}, author = {Zuk, Piotr and Zuk, Pawel}, doi = {10.3389/fpos.2024.1288787}, journal-iso = {Front Polit Sci}, journal = {FRONTIERS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE}, volume = {6}, unique-id = {34969776}, keywords = {nationalism; Border; Authoritarianism; WALLS; Refugees; right-wing populism; borderphobia}, year = {2024}, eissn = {2673-3145} } @article{MTMT:32888565, title = {Intraregional Geopolitical Imaginaries in Europe: Hungary and Poland Vs. France and Germany}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32888565}, author = {Arya, Nitin}, doi = {10.1080/14650045.2022.2078708}, journal-iso = {GEOPOLITICS}, journal = {GEOPOLITICS}, volume = {28}, unique-id = {32888565}, issn = {1465-0045}, year = {2023}, eissn = {1557-3028}, pages = {1807-1842}, orcid-numbers = {Arya, Nitin/0000-0001-8147-8089} } @article{MTMT:33038987, title = {Defending Europe at the Trianon Border: Geopolitical Visions of Nationhood and the Remaking of Hungary’s Southern Border}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33038987}, author = {Merabishvili, Gela}, doi = {10.1080/14650045.2022.2104158}, journal-iso = {GEOPOLITICS}, journal = {GEOPOLITICS}, volume = {28}, unique-id = {33038987}, issn = {1465-0045}, year = {2023}, eissn = {1557-3028}, pages = {2074-2110}, orcid-numbers = {Merabishvili, Gela/0000-0001-5912-1358} } @article{MTMT:33675532, title = {‘A Defender of Christendom’? The Inner Logic of Hungary’s Humanitarian Aid Policy}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33675532}, author = {Paragi, Beáta}, doi = {10.1080/09668136.2023.2171368}, journal-iso = {EUROPE-ASIA STUD}, journal = {EUROPE-ASIA STUDIES}, volume = {75}, unique-id = {33675532}, issn = {0966-8136}, year = {2023}, eissn = {1465-3427}, pages = {769-795}, orcid-numbers = {Paragi, Beáta/0000-0002-7432-7810} } @article{MTMT:33728311, title = {Dismantling the reception of asylum seekers: Hungary’s illiberal asylum policies and EU responses}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33728311}, author = {Segarra, H.}, doi = {10.1080/21599165.2023.2180732}, journal-iso = {EAST EUROPEAN POLITICS}, journal = {EAST EUROPEAN POLITICS}, volume = {39}, unique-id = {33728311}, issn = {2159-9165}, abstract = {Since 2015, the Hungarian government successfully securitised migration and profoundly changed the country’s asylum system. Through qualitative research and expert interviews, this article demonstrates how reception infrastructure was extra-territorialised, while reception standards were dissolved. This was accompanied by the criminalising of civil society and asylum seeker support groups. The ramifications of this externalisation impact asylum seekers’ rights to a dignified reception in EU member states, and contravene EU citizens’ freedoms. The article discusses these developments within European securitisation European human rights discourses, and Hungary’s illiberal governance. It also identifies weaknesses of common European reception standards in light of illiberal policymaking. © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.}, keywords = {Hungary; European Union; Asylum; Externalisation; securitisation; reception conditions}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2159-9173}, pages = {1-21} } @article{MTMT:34635324, title = {Between Inclusion and Exclusion: The Representations of Illegal Immigrants and Refugees on Spanish Party VOX's Instagram During the First Year of the War in Ukraine}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34635324}, author = {Trujillo, Alberto Monroy}, doi = {10.1080/17449057.2023.2285108}, journal-iso = {ETHNOPOLITICS}, journal = {ETHNOPOLITICS}, unique-id = {34635324}, issn = {1744-9057}, year = {2023}, eissn = {1744-9065} } @article{MTMT:34275328, title = {Sovereignty, Discipline, Governmentality, and Pastorate: The Ménage à Quatre of Contemporary Authoritarian and Right-Wing Populist Power}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34275328}, author = {Vasilache, Andreas}, doi = {10.1177/03043754231199785}, journal-iso = {ALTERNATIVES}, journal = {ALTERNATIVES}, volume = {48}, unique-id = {34275328}, issn = {0304-3754}, abstract = {This article deals with the role that different rationalities of power play in current authoritarian and right-wing populist governance. Referring to Foucauldian power theory, I will argue that power rationalities and practices in current authoritarian and right-wing populist rule are diverse and variable. I intend to show that various aspects of the sovereign, disciplinary, governmental, and pastoral types of power as outlined by Foucault play an important role in contemporary authoritarianism and right-wing populism. Thereby, this article pursues a twofold aim. On the one hand, the Foucauldian discussion of power in authoritarian and populist rationalities and practices should contribute to better understand current phenomena of new authoritarianism and right-wing populism. On the other hand, the following considerations should also provide a more detailed theoretical insight into the relation between, and compatibilities as well as incompatibilities of, the different types of power described by Foucault.}, keywords = {right-wing populism; Michel Foucault; international liberal order; new authoritarianism; theory of power; international political theory}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2163-3150}, pages = {242-267} } @article{MTMT:34071746, title = {Exclusion of Climate Migrants from the Global Compact on Refugees}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34071746}, author = {Woodworth, Fran}, doi = {10.1080/14650045.2023.2225242}, journal-iso = {GEOPOLITICS}, journal = {GEOPOLITICS}, volume = {28}, unique-id = {34071746}, issn = {1465-0045}, year = {2023}, eissn = {1557-3028}, pages = {Article in Press} } @article{MTMT:34452508, title = {The Turów coal mine international dispute as a determinant of the cross-border integration of inhabitants of the Polish-Czech border}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/34452508}, author = {Wróblewski, Łukasz and Boháč, Artur and Böhm, Hynek}, doi = {10.2478/mgr-2023-0019}, journal-iso = {MORAV GEOGR REP}, journal = {MORAVIAN GEOGRAPHICAL REPORTS}, volume = {31}, unique-id = {34452508}, issn = {1210-8812}, year = {2023}, eissn = {2199-6202}, pages = {203-213}, orcid-numbers = {Wróblewski, Łukasz/0000-0002-4465-0107; Boháč, Artur/0000-0001-6238-7472; Böhm, Hynek/0000-0003-0548-9645} } @article{MTMT:31346038, title = {Clashing geopolitical self-images? The strange co-existence of Christian bulwark and Eurasianism (Turanism) in Hungary}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/31346038}, author = {Balogh, Péter}, doi = {10.1080/15387216.2020.1779772}, journal-iso = {EURASIAN GEOGR ECON}, journal = {EURASIAN GEOGRAPHY AND ECONOMICS}, volume = {63}, unique-id = {31346038}, issn = {1538-7216}, year = {2022}, eissn = {1938-2863}, pages = {726-752}, orcid-numbers = {Balogh, Péter/0000-0001-8220-3220} } @article{MTMT:33230013, title = {On the (geo)political salience of geographical imaginations: a central European perspective}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33230013}, author = {Balogh, Péter and Gál, Zoltán and Hajdú, Zoltán and Rácz, Szilárd and Scott, James W.}, doi = {10.1080/15387216.2022.2142146}, journal-iso = {EURASIAN GEOGR ECON}, journal = {EURASIAN GEOGRAPHY AND ECONOMICS}, volume = {63}, unique-id = {33230013}, issn = {1538-7216}, year = {2022}, eissn = {1938-2863}, pages = {691-703}, orcid-numbers = {Balogh, Péter/0000-0001-8220-3220; Gál, Zoltán/0000-0002-7274-9163; Hajdú, Zoltán/0000-0003-2055-5962; Rácz, Szilárd/0000-0002-9397-2620; Scott, James W./0000-0001-6092-9784} } @article{MTMT:33932026, title = {Performing Identity Entrepreneurship During the Colonisation of New Zealand: A Rhetorical Construction of `Loyal Subjects of the Empire'}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33932026}, author = {Choi, Sarah Y. and Liu, James H. and Belgrave, Michael}, doi = {10.5964/jspp.6477}, journal-iso = {J SOC POL PSYCH}, journal = {JOURNAL OF SOCIAL AND POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY}, volume = {10}, unique-id = {33932026}, abstract = {A thematic analysis of New Zealand's historical Speeches from the Throne (10 speeches, from 1860-1899) investigated rhetorical strategies used by Governors during colonisation, to mobilise both settler and indigenous people's participation in the British Empire. Identity leadership (Reicher & Hopkins, 2001, https://doi.org/10.1111/0162-895X.00246), augmented by critical theories of emotion (Williams, 1977, Marxism and literature. Oxford University Press) under the cultural framework of hierarchical relationalism (Liu, 2015, https://doi.org/10.1111/jtsb.12058) was applied to show how unequal but reciprocal relationships were invoked by Governors, as representatives of the Crown and advocates for the general public in New Zealand. Governors attempted to mediate a positive shared identity within the British Empire; but at the same time to isolate those who excluded from subjecthood by their hostility to the Crown. Governors alternated between efforts to mobilise people against indigenous Maori who challenged them, and offers to include Maori who conformed to the conventions required of a hierarchical relationship between Crown and subject. We reflectreflect on how these dynamics of rhetorical performance may still be relevant today, especially in contexts of hierarchy and in the domain of leaderfollower relations more broadly.}, keywords = {emotion; thematic analysis; Colonisation; coloniality; identity entrepreneurship; rhetorical analysis; hierarchical relationalism}, year = {2022}, eissn = {2195-3325} } @inbook{MTMT:33527005, title = {Between dynamic practice and normative limits: minorities and debordering processes in the European Union}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33527005}, author = {Engl, Alice}, booktitle = {Research Handbook on Minority Politics in the European Union}, doi = {10.4337/9781800375932.00025}, unique-id = {33527005}, year = {2022}, pages = {289-308} } @article{MTMT:33398607, title = {A RADICAL-RIGHT POPULIST DEFINITION OF CROSS-NATIONAL REGIONALISM IN EUROPE: Shaping Power Geometries at the Regional Scale Beyond State Borders}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33398607}, author = {Lamour, Christian}, doi = {10.1111/1468-2427.13052}, journal-iso = {INT J URBAN REG RES}, journal = {INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH}, volume = {46}, unique-id = {33398607}, issn = {0309-1317}, abstract = {Radical-right populism has become a structural political phenomenon in the European Union in recent years. This ideology, the core principle of which is based on a nurtured antagonism between the 'people' and the 'elite', combined with a parallel promotion of authoritarian and nativist ideas, is generally associated with the nation state and its core territorial ideology: nationalism. However, populism can also be scaled at the regional level, within or across European state borders. This article, which is based on critical discourse analysis, aims to investigate what might constitute the meaning of cross-national regionalism according to a radical-right populist leader in Europe. More precisely, my objective is to research the antagonism this type of leader can structure to organize territorial, symbolic and institutional claims associated with a specific cross-national region. This research is based on the discourse Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban produced in relation to the Visegrad region. My analysis helps to reveal the types of power geometries articulated by populist leaders beyond state borders.}, keywords = {Europe; SCALES; regionalism; Critical discourse analysis; borders; Viktor Orban; radical-right populism; Visegrad region}, year = {2022}, eissn = {1468-2427}, pages = {8-25}, orcid-numbers = {Lamour, Christian/0000-0001-9571-6228} } @article{MTMT:32866067, title = {European populism and the return of ‘illiberal sovereignty’: a case-study of Hungary}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32866067}, author = {Paris, Roland}, doi = {10.1093/ia/iiac004}, journal-iso = {INT AFF}, journal = {INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS}, volume = {98}, unique-id = {32866067}, issn = {0020-5850}, year = {2022}, eissn = {1468-2346}, pages = {529-547} } @article{MTMT:33333871, title = {Insecurity, incoherence, and imagined geographies in Central Europe}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33333871}, author = {Richardson, Paul B.}, doi = {10.1080/15387216.2022.2138485}, journal-iso = {EURASIAN GEOGR ECON}, journal = {EURASIAN GEOGRAPHY AND ECONOMICS}, volume = {63}, unique-id = {33333871}, issn = {1538-7216}, year = {2022}, eissn = {1938-2863}, pages = {779-786} } @article{MTMT:32202888, title = {Visegrád four political regionalism as a critical reflection of Europeanization: deciphering the “Illiberal Turn”}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32202888}, author = {Scott, James W.}, doi = {10.1080/15387216.2021.1972023}, journal-iso = {EURASIAN GEOGR ECON}, journal = {EURASIAN GEOGRAPHY AND ECONOMICS}, volume = {63}, unique-id = {32202888}, issn = {1538-7216}, year = {2022}, eissn = {1938-2863}, pages = {704-725}, orcid-numbers = {Scott, James W./0000-0001-6092-9784} } @inbook{MTMT:32600917, title = {Czech-Polish-Slovak cross-border region in a comparative perspective: in the middle income trap}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32600917}, author = {Böhm, Hynek}, booktitle = {Silesia and the problem of the middle income trap}, unique-id = {32600917}, year = {2021}, pages = {49-61} } @article{MTMT:33398606, title = {Beyond populism: the ideological dimensions of anti-politics}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/33398606}, author = {Kajsiu, Blendi}, doi = {10.1080/13569317.2021.2017134}, journal-iso = {J POL IDEOL}, journal = {JOURNAL OF POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES}, unique-id = {33398606}, issn = {1356-9317}, abstract = {The tendency to identify anti-politics with populism obscures the diverse ideological positions from which the political class and political institutions are denounced and rejected. It is important, therefore, to distinguish between populist and non-populist antipolitics discourses. An anti-politics discourse can be classified as populist only when it is articulated with key concepts of populism, understood as a thin ideology, such as popular sovereignty, the people as the underdog and the will of the people as the ultimate source of political legitimacy. Given that populism as a thin ideology consists of a very limited number of core concepts it is rarely the only, or the dominant, ideological dimension of anti-politics. The rejection of the ruling political class and institutions can be justified from a number of ideological positions. There are populist, conservative, nationalist, liberal and socialist anti-politics, or a combination thereof. It is only by distinguishing between populism and anti-politics that we can identify the multiple ideological dimensions of the latter.}, year = {2021}, eissn = {1469-9613} } @article{MTMT:32189086, title = {Implications of a Psychological Approach to Collective Remembering: Social Representations as Cultural Ground for Interpreting Survey and Experimental Results}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32189086}, author = {Liu, James H. and Khan, Sammyh S.}, doi = {10.1177/18344909211007938}, journal-iso = {J PAC RIM PSYCHOL}, journal = {JOURNAL OF PACIFIC RIM PSYCHOLOGY}, volume = {15}, unique-id = {32189086}, issn = {1834-4909}, year = {2021}, eissn = {1834-4909}, orcid-numbers = {Liu, James H./0000-0001-9520-5727} } @article{MTMT:32560179, title = {Post-Millennial Visegrád Four Geopolitics: Illiberalism and Positionality within the EU}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32560179}, author = {Scott, James W.}, doi = {10.32725/det.2021.011}, journal-iso = {DETUROPE}, journal = {DETUROPE: THE CENTRAL EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND TOURISM}, volume = {13}, unique-id = {32560179}, issn = {1821-2506}, year = {2021}, eissn = {1821-2506}, pages = {13-33}, orcid-numbers = {Scott, James W./0000-0001-6092-9784} } @article{MTMT:31268993, title = {The Foreign Policy of Populists in Power. Contesting Liberalism in Poland and Hungary}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/31268993}, author = {Varga, Mihai and Buzogány, Aron}, doi = {10.1080/14650045.2020.1734564}, journal-iso = {GEOPOLITICS}, journal = {GEOPOLITICS}, volume = {26}, unique-id = {31268993}, issn = {1465-0045}, year = {2021}, eissn = {1557-3028}, pages = {1442-1463}, orcid-numbers = {Varga, Mihai/0000-0003-0278-7145; Buzogány, Aron/0000-0002-9867-3742} } @book{MTMT:32218471, title = {Vernacular Border Security. Citizens’ Narratives of Europe’s ‘Migration Crisis}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32218471}, isbn = {9780198855538}, author = {Vaughan-Williams, Nick}, doi = {10.1093/oso/9780198855538.001.0001}, publisher = {OUP}, unique-id = {32218471}, year = {2021} } @article{MTMT:32012340, title = {Transport Infrastructure and Political Factors as Determinants of Tourism Development in the Cross-Border Region of Bihor and Maramureş. A Comparative Analysis}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/32012340}, author = {Wendt, Jan A. and Grama, Vasile and Ilieş, Gabriela and Mikhaylov, Andrey S. and Borza, Sorin G. and Herman, Grigore Vasile and Bógdał-Brzezińska, Agnieszka}, doi = {10.3390/su13105385}, journal-iso = {SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL}, journal = {SUSTAINABILITY}, volume = {13}, unique-id = {32012340}, year = {2021}, eissn = {2071-1050}, orcid-numbers = {Wendt, Jan A./0000-0003-1712-4926; Mikhaylov, Andrey S./0000-0002-5155-2628; Borza, Sorin G./0000-0002-0443-1030; Bógdał-Brzezińska, Agnieszka/0000-0003-0247-1941} } @article{MTMT:31772482, title = {Interventions on European nationalist populism and bordering in time of emergencies}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/31772482}, author = {Casaglia, Anna and Coletti, Raffaella and Lizotte, Christopher and Agnew, John and Mamadouh, Virginie and Minca, Claudio}, doi = {10.1016/j.polgeo.2020.102238}, journal-iso = {POLIT GEOGR}, journal = {POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY}, volume = {82}, unique-id = {31772482}, issn = {0962-6298}, year = {2020}, eissn = {1873-5096}, orcid-numbers = {Minca, Claudio/0000-0001-6619-6614} } @{MTMT:31786385, title = {Rescaling the border: national populism, sovereignty, and civilizationism}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/31786385}, author = {Richardson, Paul}, booktitle = {A Research Agenda for Border Studies}, doi = {10.4337/9781788972741.00010}, unique-id = {31786385}, year = {2020}, pages = {43-54} } @article{MTMT:31134909, title = {Territorial cooperation, supraregionalist institution-building and national boundaries: the European Grouping of Territorial Cooperation (EGTC) at the eastern and western German borders}, url = {https://m2.mtmt.hu/api/publication/31134909}, author = {Ulrich, Peter}, doi = {10.1080/09654313.2019.1623974}, journal-iso = {EUR PLAN STUD}, journal = {EUROPEAN PLANNING STUDIES}, volume = {28}, unique-id = {31134909}, issn = {0965-4313}, keywords = {Germany; European Union; regionalization; transboundary cooperation; regionalism; territorial management; border region; institutional development}, year = {2020}, eissn = {1469-5944}, pages = {57-80} }