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  1. Can the EU Stop Eastern Europe's Illiberal Turn?Hilary Appel - 2019 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 31 (3-4):255-266.
    ABSTRACT The EU’s activation of Article 7 procedures against Hungary and Poland signals that it is beginning to take seriously the illiberal turn in Central Europe. However, the likelihood that the EU can restrain populist and illiberal tendencies in Hungary and Poland in the near future is slim. Despite the efficacy of the EU and other international organizations in promoting liberalism in these countries in the past, similar efforts are hobbled by a lack of political will and by significant bureaucratic (...)
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  • The University and the State. A Study into Global Transformations.Marek Kwiek - unknown
    This book argues that the current renegotiation of the postwar social contract concerning the welfare state in Europe is being accompanied by the renegotiation of a smaller-scale modern social pact between the university and the nation-state. Current transformations to the state under the pressures of globalization will not leave the university unaffected, and consequently it is useful to discuss the university and its future in the context of the state. In the new global order, against the odds, universities are striving (...)
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  • At the End of the Post-Communist Transformation? Normalization or Imagining Utopia?Larry Ray - 2009 - European Journal of Social Theory 12 (3):321-336.
    This article reviews the implications of the collapse of Communism in Europe for some themes in recent social theory. It was often assumed that 1989 was part of a global process of normalization and routinization of social life that had been left behind earlier utopian hopes. Nothing that utopia is open to various interpretations, including utopias of the everyday, this article suggests, first that there were utopian dimensions to 1989, and, second, that these hopes continue to influence contemporary social and (...)
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  • Radical Left in Albania and Kosovo: Differences and Similarities.Klejd Këlliçi & Emira Danaj - 2016 - Seeu Review 12 (1):7-26.
    The main research question for this paper is: Are there radical left wing movements in Albania and Kosovo and what are their main traits? Through answering this question, we will explore the development of radical left wing movements. With radical left we intend movements that reject the underlying socio-economic structure of contemporary capitalism and its values and practices without opposing democracy. Through a thorough desk research and several interviews with experts and activists both in Albania and Kosovo, we look at (...)
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