This book uses the V4 countries as an ideal political environment for testing shifts in Euroscepticism and illiberalism in the dynamic context of the "politicising moments" of multiple crises.
It analyses what kind of Euroscepticism prevailed in East-Central Europe during the COVID-19 and Ukrainian war crises and how it changed compared to its manifestation during the earlier Eurozone and migration crises. With this, it looks at how, and under what circumstances, Eurosceptic narratives were linked to illiberal ones. The authors reveal that Euroscepticism and illiberalism are more than pure coincidence and highlight the conceptual connections between them, showing how Euroscepticism and illiberalism cross-fertilise and reinforce each other.
This book is of key interest to scholars and students of Euroscepticism, Central-Eastern European, party politics, illiberalism, politics in the period of crises and more broadly to European and EU studies, comparative politics, and area studies.
Autorentext
Vít HlouSek is a Professor at the Department of Political Science and Anglophone Studies, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic.
Vratislav Havlík is an Associate Professor and Department Vice-Head of the International Institute of Political Science at the Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, Czech Republic.
Veronika Velicka Zapletalová is Assistant Professor of European Politics and Vice-Dean for Communication at the Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, Czech Republic.
Pavlína Kutnarová is a Junior Research Fellow at the International Institute for Political Science at the Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, Czech Republic.