Cathrin Kahlweit in conversation with Stefano Bottoni
ORBÁN
How did Hungary, once the model student among the Eastern European transition countries after 1989, become the country it is today with its illiberal National System of Cooperation? Which deep-lying social developments and roots propelled a football-loving boy from the Hungarian provinces to the top of the country? How has Viktor Orbán managed to shape and steer the fate of his country for more than three decades now? And what are the chances that he and his governmental system will be replaced in next year’s elections? These and other historical and political science questions are answered in the book by the Italian historian Stefano Bottoni, who will be present to introduce and discuss his work.
The historian Stefano Bottoni is a lecturer at the University of Florence. Between 2009 and 2019 he worked at the Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and cooperated in various international projects with renowned European institutions. He is a specialist in the history of interethnic relations and nation-building under communism in Eastern Europe. For several years, he has been studying the crisis of post-communist democracy in Hungary from a comparative perspective.
Cathrin Kahlweit, a longtime SZ correspondent, is a publicist and moderator.