Democratic Erosion and Democratic Resilience in Central Europe during COVID-19

Dublin Core

Title

Democratic Erosion and Democratic Resilience in Central Europe during COVID-19

Subject

pandemic
democratic resilience
CEE
Czech Republic
Hungary
Poland
Slovakia

Description

What are the effects of populists in power on democracy during apandemic? The paper seeks to distinguish the extent to which the COVID-19pandemic can (not) be traced to democratic erosion and democraticresilience. Are the changes in the quality of democracy resulting frompolitical leaders' actions or rather a path-dependent continuation ofprevious trends? This contribution focuses on two paths – democraticerosion and democratic resilience – in the Visegrad Four countries (theCzech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia), which are all governed bypopulist leaders. It builds on previous literature that focused principally onthe first wave of the pandemic by focusing on institutional guardrails andaccountability (vertical, horizontal, and diagonal) during the 18 months ofthe pandemic. It seeks to answer the following question: What conditionsare necessary and sufficient to prevent democratic erosion?

Creator

Guasti, Petra

Source

Czech Journal of International Relations; Vol. 56 No. 4 (2021); 91-104
2788-2993
2788-2985

Publisher

Institute of International Relations Prague

Date

2021-12-01

Rights

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0

Relation

Format

application/pdf

Language

eng

Type

info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Identifier

Citation

Petra Guasti, Democratic Erosion and Democratic Resilience in Central Europe during COVID-19, Institute of International Relations Prague, 2021, accessed November 6, 2024, https://igi.indrastra.com/items/show/3496

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