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Book

The New Right in the New Europe

Book

The New Right in the New Europe

DOI link for The New Right in the New Europe

The New Right in the New Europe book

Czech Transformation and Right-Wing Politics, 1989–2006

The New Right in the New Europe

DOI link for The New Right in the New Europe

The New Right in the New Europe book

Czech Transformation and Right-Wing Politics, 1989–2006
BySeán Hanley
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2007
eBook Published 24 July 2007
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203479353
Pages 288
eBook ISBN 9780203479353
Subjects Area Studies, Politics & International Relations
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Hanley, S. (2007). The New Right in the New Europe: Czech Transformation and Right-Wing Politics, 1989–2006 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203479353

ABSTRACT

This book considers the emergence of centre right parties in Eastern Europe following the fall of communism, focusing primarily on the case of the Czech Republic.

Although the country with the strongest social democratic traditions in Eastern Europe, the Czech Republic also produced the region’s strongest and most durable party of the free market right in Václav Klaus’ Civic Democratic Party (ODS). Seán Hanley considers the different varieties of right-wing politics that emerged in post-communist Europe, exploring in particular detail the origins of the Czech neo-liberal right, tracing its genesis to the reactions of dissidents and technocrats to the collapse of 1960s reform communism. He argues that, rather than being shaped by distant historical legacies, the emergence of centre-right parties can best be understood by examining the responses of counter-elites, outside or marginal to the former communist party-state establishment, to the collapse of communism and the imperatives of market reform and decommunization. This volume goes on to consider the emergence of right-wing forces in the disintegrating Civic Forum movement in 1990, the foundation of the ODS, the right’s period in office under Klaus in 1992-97, and its subsequent divisions and decline. It concludes by analyzing the ideology of the Czech Right, and its growing euroscepticism.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|18 pages

Getting the right right in post-communist Europe

chapter 2|21 pages

Historical legacies and the Czech right

chapter 3|26 pages

‘Normalization’ and the elite origins of the Czech right

chapter 4|25 pages

From civic movement to right-wing party: The emergence of the Civic Democratic Party 1990–1

chapter 5|37 pages

‘An unrepeatable chance’: The dominance of the new Czech right 1992–6

chapter 6|31 pages

Beyond the politics of transformation: Declining and realigning 1996–2006

chapter 7|28 pages

Conservatism, nation and transformation: Building a new ideology of the right

chapter 8|29 pages

From neo-liberalism to national interests: Europe and the new Czech right

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