Abstract
The sudden political shift in Hungary from state socialism to democracy concealed the much slower pace of change in economics and civil society. Distrust and suspicion evolved towards politics and politicians. Liberalism became the major political ideology but it lacked consistency and a firm social basis. A permanent social deprivation was experienced since the inception of the transition period, which gave rise to hidden socialist expectations supporting strong state intervention into housing, employment, education, health care. There is a strong social basis in Hungary for any political aspiration that introduces nationalism into political discourse. Inconsistencies between cognitive elements of diverse political ideologies were revealed along with a strong drive for consistency among intellectuals, who were the leading forces in the transition process. The authors of this article argue that there will be no successful transition without the development of new patterns of thought and social skills replacing helplessness, intolerance and aggression.
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His major research areas include Hungarian national identity, political socialization, political and ideological attitudes.
His major research areas cover social mobility under state socialism, political sociology and perception of social injustice from a cross-national perspective.
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Csepeli, G., Örkény, A. Social change, political beliefs, and everyday expectations in hungarian society. Knowledge and Policy 5, 68–76 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02692806
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02692806