Illiberal Democracy in Central- and Eastern Europe

Social Sciences Program
Budapest, Hungary

Dates: 2/4/24 - 6/2/24

Social Sciences

Illiberal Democracy in Central- and Eastern Europe

Illiberal Democracy in Central- and Eastern Europe Course Overview

OVERVIEW

CEA CAPA Partner Institution: Corvinus University of Budapest
Location: , Hungary
Primary Subject Area: Political Science
Instruction in: English
Course Code: POL G24
Transcript Source: Partner Institution
Course Details: Level 300
Recommended Semester Credits: 3
Contact Hours: 45

DESCRIPTION

During the course Central-and Eastern European economic and political systems are analysed by the methodology of political economy. In the focal point of our analysis stands the relationship between the political and the economic systems of the CEE countries. Using the framework of political economy, we scrutinize the impact of EU accession of these countries on the operation, structure, development, and performance of their states. Why does populism strengthen and why do illiberal or managed democracies emerge is also a crucial question of the course. We do not only focus on explanation of the rise of illiberal states, but we also want to understand the possible impacts on the development of societies and economic systems of these countries. During the course we study Jelcin's and Putin's Russia, Meciar's and Fico's Slovakia, Tudjman's Croatia, Illiescu's Romania, Kaczynskis' Poland and Orbán's Hungary.

Corvinus University of Budapest awards credits based on the ECTS system (2 ECTS credits equals 1 U.S. credit therefore, 6 ECTS credits is equivalent to 3 U.S. credits). At Corvinus University of Budapest, all classes meet for a minimum of 180 minutes per week. Contact hours are calculated through a combination of lecture hours and outside activities which can include (workshops, seminars, fieldwork activities, guest lectures, and independent work) therefore, contact hours may vary on syllabi.