Introduction: Historicizing an Anti-Liberal Turn
János Mátyás Kovács and Balázs Trencsényi
Chapter 1: Reinventing Hungary with Revolutionary Fervor: The Declaration of National Cooperation as a Readers’ Guide to the Fundamental Law of 2011
Chapter 2: Totalitarianism without Perpetrators? Politics of History in the “System of National Cooperation”
Chapter 3: Civil Society in an Illiberal Democracy: Government-Friendly NGOs, “Foreign Agents,” and Uncivil Publics
Chapter 4: Beyond Electioneering: Minority Hungarians and the Vision of National Unification
Chapter 5: The Role of Religion in the Illiberal Hungarian Constitutional System
Chapter 6: The Right Hand Thinks: On the Sources of György Matolcsy’s Economic Vision
Chapter 7: Towards a “Work-Based Society”?
Chapter 8: The Fear of Population Replacement
Chapter 9: Votes, Ideology, and Self-Enrichment. The Campaign of Re-nationalization After 2010
Chapter 10: Viktor Orbán’s Propaganda State
Chapter 11: Ideology or Pragmatism? Interpreting Social Policy Change under the System of National Cooperation
Chapter 12: The Central European University in the Trenches
Chapter13: The Post-communist Mafia State As a Criminal State
Chapter 14: Democracy for Losers. Comment on Bálint Magyar
Chapter 15: Nothing But a Mafia State?
Chapter 17: Supply Side Revolution: The Consequences of the 2015 Polish elections
Chapter 18: Regime, Parties, and Patronage in Contemporary Romania
Conclusion: Hungary–Brave and New? Dissecting a Realistic Dystopia