Land grabbing and the making of an authoritarian populist regime in Hungary

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Abstract

How do authoritarian populist regimes emerge within the European Union in the twenty-first century? In Hungary, land grabbing by oligarchs have been one of the pillars maintaining Prime Minister Orbán’s regime. The phenomenon remains out of the public purview and meets little resistance as the regime-controlled media keeps Hungarians ‘distracted’ with ‘dangers’ inflicted by the ‘enemies of the Hungarian people’ such as refugees and the European Union. The Hungarian case calls for scholarly-activist attention to how authoritarian populism is maintained by, and affects rural areas, as well as how emancipation can be envisaged in such a context.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Gonda, N. (2019). Land grabbing and the making of an authoritarian populist regime in Hungary. Journal of Peasant Studies, 46(3), 606–625. https://doi.org/10.1080/03066150.2019.1584190

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