18th Annual Conference of Central European Political Science Association

Third Democratic Decade: Challenges of / for Consolidation

Thursday 24th – Saturday 26th October 2013

Pilsen, Czech Republic


18th Annual Conference of Central European Political Science Association

Third Democratic Decade: Challenges of / for Consolidation

Thursday 24 – Saturday 26 October 2013, Pilsen, Czech Republic

Organized by

the Central European Political Science Association

in cooperation with

the Department of Politics and Humanities, Metropolitan University Prague

and

the Czech Political Science Association

with the official guarantee of the Lord of the Mayor of the statutory City Pilsen, Mr. Martin Baxa

and financial support of Krsek Foundation / Nadační fond Martiny a Tomáše Krskových

Program Committee of the conference

Ladislav Cabada, CEPSA and Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic (Program Chair)

Andrzej Antoszewski, University of Wrocław, Poland

Jan Bureš, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Miro Haček, CEPSA and University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

Michal Kubát, Czech Political Science Association and Charles University Prague, Czech Republic

Ana Matan, CEPSA and University of Zagreb, Croatia

Irmina Matonyté, CEPSA and ISM University of Management and Economics, Vilnius, Lithuania

Blanka Říchová, Czech Political Science Association and Charles University Prague, Czech Republic

Šárka Waisová, University of West Bohemia in Pilsen, Czech Republic

Venue

Metropolitan University Prague, Pilsner Branch, Koterovská 85, Pilsen (2ndBlock, Aula)

Thursday 24th October

15.30 – 16.30 Pre-Registration (5th Floor)

16.00 – 17.45 1st Block of Panels

Panel 1 Territorial aspects of electoral behaviour (Room 2505)

Chair Tomáš Kostelecký, Institute of Sociology Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

Who you are and where you live: Contextual aspects of voting behavior in the Czech Republic

Josef Bernard, Institute of Sociology Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

Poland's key political cleavages: their evolution and interpretation in view of the spatial dimension

Tomasz Zarycki, Robert B. Zajonc Institute for Social Studies, University of Warsaw, Poland

Spatial stability and variability of electoral results in Czech Republic in the multi-level electoral competition

Petr Voda and Michal Pink, Faculty of Social Studies Masaryk University Brno, Czech Republic

Challenges for electoral geography research in Slovakia

Tibor Madleňák, Department of Geography, Geology and Landscape Ecology, Faculty of Natural Science, Matej Bel University Banská Bystrica, Slovakia

Analysis of the territorial representativeness and the structure of the professions of Czech deputies during the First republic (1918-1938) and now

Renata Mikešová and Markéta Poláková, Institute of Sociology Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

Panel 2 Region of Western Balkans and the role of EU enlargement policy (Room 2508)

Chair Ladislav Cabada, Dept. of Politics and Humanities, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Processes of Economic Consolidation in Countries of Former Yugoslavia

Miro Haček and Simona Kukovič, University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Social Sciences, Slovenia

European Union and the Western Balkans: Problematic Partnership?

Ladislav Cabada, Dept. of Politics and Humanities, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

European Integration as a Challenge for Bosnia and Herzegovina

Helena Bauerová, Dept. of International Relations and European Studies, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Serbia: EU Accessions Perspectives

Adisa Avdić, Dept. of International Relations and European Studies, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Stabilization of Kosovo as a Way towards European Union

Hana Hlaváčková, Dept. of International Relations and European Studies, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Friday 25th October

8.45 – 9.45 Registration (Aula)

9.45 – 10.30 Welcoming Remarks (Aula)

Michal Klíma, Rector, Metropolitan University Prague

Blanka Říchová, President, Czech Political Science Association

Ladislav Cabada, President, Central European Political Science Association

10.30 – 11.00 Coffee Break (2507)

11.00 – 12.45 2nd Block of Panels

Panel 3 Political parties (Room 2504)

Chair Marek Rybář, Department of Political Science, Comenius University Bratislava, Slovakia

From Mass Parties to Franchise Parties: Parties Organization in Lithuania

Vitalija Simonaityte, Kaunas University of Technology, Kaunas, Lithuania

Policy-Related Expertise in Political Parties. From the Theory to the Czech Practice

Michel Perottino, Martin Polášek and Vilém Novotný, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic

Two Decades of Institutionalization of Political Parties in Poland

Maciej Hartliński, Institute of Political Science, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn,

Poland

Formal, Informal, and Perceived Decision Making within Political Parties: Evidence from Poland

Michał Radecki, University of Opole, Poland and Sergiu Gherghina, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany

Panel 4 Towards a Citizens’ EU: Visegrád Experiences and Road Maps (Room2505)

Co-Chairs Heino Nyyssönen, University of Tampere, Finland

Jarosław Jańczak, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland and European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder), Germany

Constructivist interaction: East-Central Europe and the EU

Heino Nyyssönen, University of Tampere, Finland

Europeanization and counter-Europeanization. Euro-philia and EU-phobia in Central-Eastern Europe

Jarosław Jańczak, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland and European University Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder), Germany

A special relationship or total neglect? Perceptions of Europe and the EU in Hungary since 2004

Gábor Egry, Institute of Political History, Budapest, Hungary

Beyond Ally Image: Framing the New Europeans

Darina Malová and Matúš Mišík, Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia

Polish Euroskepticism – ten years after

Tomasz Brańka, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland

Discussant Vít Hloušek, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic

Panel 5 Nation Branding and Public Diplomacy (Room 2508)

Chair Ladislav Cabada, Dept. of Politics and Humanities, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Hungarian brand politics in comparison with Central European neighbours

Andreas Pribersky, University of Vienna, Austria

Creating the image of polish cities and regions as a challenge to democracy in the 21st century
Urszula Wasińska, University Jan Kochanowski in Kielce, Poland

Branding the Czech Republic: Public Diplomacy and Nation Branding as Foreign Policy Instruments
Ladislav Cabada, Deot. of Humanities, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic
Šárka Waisová, Dept. of International Relations and European Studies, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Panel 6 Populism, radicalism, extremism (Room 2506)

Co-Chairs Oľga Gyarfášová, Comenius University Bratislava, Slovakia

Karin Liebhart, University of Vienna, Austria

Youth participation in the right-wing extremist politics in East Central Europe

Miroslav Mareš, Masaryk University Brno, Czech Republic

Contemporary Populism

Berto Šalaj, Faculty of Political Science, Zagreb University, Croatia

Framing enemies by far right parties in Slovakia and the Czech Republic: An analytical framework

Alena Kluknavská, Department of Political Science, Faculty of Philosophy, Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia

National Identity-Building and Political Legitimacy in the 1990s Croatia: The Case of “Tudjmanism”

Stevo Đurašković, Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Zagreb, Croatia

Euro-sceptics in Lithuania: doomed to marginality?

Ingrida Unikaite-Jakuntaviciene and Liudas Mažylis, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania

13.00 – 14.45 Lunch (Hotel Primavera) – details find on the last page

15.15 – 17.00 3rd Block of Panels

Panel 7 The Outlines of New Europe: Multilevel Governance and Differentiated Membership in the EU28 (Room 2506)

Chair Boglárka Koller, King Sigismund College, Budapest, Hungary

The Fall of the Berlin Wall and the European Politics: The perspectives of the New Europe in the early 21st century

Attila Ágh, Corvinus University, Budapest, Hungary

Myth of the European Union

Krisztina Arató, Institute of Political Sciences, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary

Support for the supranational EU governance: how and why national elites differ in the Western Europe and in the CEE

Irmina Matonyté, ISM University of Management and Economics, Vilnius, Lithuania

EU in Slovakia’s political debate and public perception

Oľga Gyarfášová, Comenius University, Slovakia

Between multi-level-governance structures and anti EU rhetoric: the case of Austria

Karin Liebhart, University of Vienna, Austria

Panel 8 Non-Partisan Actors of Euro-scepticism in Central Europe (Room2504)

Chair Vít Hloušek, International Institute of Political Science, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic

Much A do about Nothing? Non-party Euroscepticism in post-1989 Poland

Monika Bil, Sussex European Institute, Sussex University, UK

Mapping Czech Eurosceptical Landscape

Vratislav Havlík and Ondřej Mocek, International Institute of Political Science, Masaryk University, Czech Republic

Attitudes towards EU in the eve of a decade after accession: a voice of Lithuanian voters

Vaida Jankauskaitė, Institute of Policy and Public Administration, Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania

Why there is (almost) no Euroscepticism in Slovenia?

Alenka Krašovec and Damjan Lajh, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

The New Wave of Radical Right in Europe: Revival of Economic Nationalism
and its Consequences on the European Project

András Tóth, Institute for Political Science, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary

Panel 9 EU-policies and Central Europe (Room 2508)

Chair Mats Braun, Dept. of International relations and European Studies, Metropolitan University Prague, and Institute of International Relations, Prague, Czech Republic

Prague on a Mission: Emphasizing Democracy Promotion within the EU’s Foreign Policy

Marek Neuman, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, Netherlands

Turkish foreign policy:Is europenization possible without the EU membership prospect?

Derya Özveri, Kocaeli University, Turkey

Challenges of Anti-corruption Policy: The Case of Croatia

Anamarija Musa and Petra Đurman, Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb, Croatia

Panel 10 Electoral studies (Room 2505)

Chair Jan Outlý, Dept. of Politics and Humanities, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

A Comparative Assessment of List Composition in Central and Eastern Europe

Jan Kovář, Metropolitan University Prague, Sergiu Gherghina, Goethe University Frankfurt, Mihail Chiru,Central European University

Proportional Representation in the Hungarian Electoral System

Levente Nagy, Department of Political Science, Debrecen, Hungary

Women's National Election Success or Stagnacy? A Study on the Implementation of Croatia's Quota Legislation in the 21st Century

Marjeta Šinko, Faculty of Political Science, University of Zagreb, Croatia

Electoral Behaviour of Citizens in the South Ukraine Region: Case Study of Local Elections

Olena Yatsunska, Mykolayiv Regional Center of the Local Government Development, Ukraine

The Third Decade of Consolidation of Local Elections in Poland

Karolina Tybuchowska-Hartlińska, Institute of Political Science, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn, Poland

18:00 West Bohemian Museum, Meeting with the Lord of the Mayor of the City Pilsen – details find on the last page

Welcoming remarks

Mr. Martin Baxa, Lord of Mayor of the City Pilsen

Prof. Jerzy Wiatr, Senior President of CEPSA

Buffet Dinner

Saturday 26th October

9.00 – 10.45 4th Block of Panels

Panel 11 Political Participation (Room 2504)

Chair Andreas Pribersky, University of Vienna, Austria

Bringing the Culture Back in? Rethinking Links between Resources, Tools and Agendas of Political Activists

Marek Rybář and Anna Šovčíková, Department of Political Science, Comenius University Bratislava, Slovakia

Media, political trust, and political participation in five Central European Countries

Klára Plecitá and Markéta Sedláčková, Institute of Sociology of Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic

Resources and Incentives: The Determinants of Cognitive Engagement in Post-Communist Politics

Marius Ioan Tatar, University of Oradea, Department of Political Science and Communication Studies, Romania

The gender dimension of right wing populism and right wing extremism

Karin Bischof, Institute for Conflict Research Vienna

Panel 12 Political Elites (Room 2508)

Chair Irmina Matonyté, ISM University of Management and Economics, Vilnius, Lithuania

Elite profile and type of institutional transformation: Comparison of Russia and Slovenia

Matevž Tomšič and Lea Prijon, School of Advanced Social Studies in Nova Gorica, Slovenia

Local Political Elites in East-Central Europe: Between the Legacy of the Past and Decentralization of the Present

Roxana Marin, Political Science Department, University of Bucharest, Romania

Whom to trust: political scientists or voters? Left and right in party platforms and voters' attitudes in Croatia 1990-2011

Dario Nikić Čakar and Goran Čular, Faculty of Political Science, University of Zagreb, Croatia

Panel 13 (+ Panel 15) The State of Democracy and Governance in East-Central Europe (Room 2506)

Chair Martin Brusis, University of Munich, Germany

Strenghts and weaknesses of Czech Democracy

Zdenka Mansfeldová, Institute of Sociology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

Petra Guasti, Institute of Sociology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic and Johannes Guttenberg University of Mainz, Germany

Slovenia

Alenka Krašovec, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

Slovakia

Darina Malová, Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia

Poland

Claudia-Yvette Matthes, Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany

Hungary

Attila Ágh, Corvinus University, Budapest, Hungary

Croatia

Davor Boban, Faculty of Political Science, University of Zagreb, Croatia

Panel 14 A New Wave of Constitutional Changes in Central and South-eastern Europe? (Room 2505)

Chair Ellen Bos, Andrássy University Budapest, Hungary

Consociational democracy as a means of building stable democracies in the region of the Western Balkans?

Christina Griessler, Andrássy University Budapest, Hungary

Constitution and Democratic Consolidation in Post-socialist Bulgaria. A Formal Institution as Decisive Factor in the Southeast European Context?

Michael Hein, University Greifswald, Germany

Romanian Constitutionalism: Form without Content?

Paul Blokker, University of Trento, Italy

Constitutionalism and political culture in Hungary

Kálman Pócza, Pázmany Péter Catholic University, Hungary

10.45 – 11.15 Coffee Break (Room 2507)

11.15 – 13.00 5th Block of Panels

Panel 15 (continuation of panel 13)

The State of Democracy and Governance in East-Central Europe (Room 2506)

Panel 16 Constitutional Engineering

Chair Ladislav Cabada, Dept. of Politics and Humanities, Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic

Constitution Making and Constitutional Review in Hungary 2011-2013

Máté Szabó, the Commissioner for Fundamental Rights, Hungary

Legal and Political Constitutionalism in Hungary

Attila Antal, Institute of Political Science, Eötvös Loránd University Faculty of Law, Hungary

Too Much, too soon: The Determinants of Constitutional Reform in Central and Eastern Europe

Sergiu Gherghina, University of Frankfurt and Sergiu Miscoiu, Babes-Bolyai University Cluj

Democratisation and Electoral Engineering. Some Negative Lessons from Croatia

Robert Podolnjak, Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb, Croatia

Panel 18 Political Actors and Society (Room 2508)

Chair Vít Hloušek, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic

Stability and Change in Party Systems with Strong Political Identities: The Case of Croatia

Andrija Henjak and Goran Čular, Faculty of Political Science, University of Zagreb, Croatia