This article traces the development of two post-communist parties—the Czech KSČM and the German PDS—illustrating how they may continue to shape hard left policy in an expanded European Union (EU). It analyses three policy areas in detail (security and defense policy, employment policy and policies towards the institutional reform of the EU) and argues that, providing the parties avoid internal ideological conflict, they may come to play significant roles in influencing hard left policy in future years. The PDS is likely to act as a bridge for other hard left groups with more conservative agendas while the much larger KSČM may attempt to shift the ideological balance back towards more structurally conservative anti-capitalist policies
This article gauges how plausible deep historical explanations are in accounting for the emergence o...
The paper concentrates on attitudes to the enlargement and the future of EU held by relevant politic...
Communist successor parties in central Europe are not a homogeneous group of political actors. Proce...
In his article the author makes an attempt to analyze the campaigns of modernization of the Europea...
Coalition formation in the Federal Republic of Germany has, following unification in 1990, become a ...
After the German reunification, the West German party system has been transferred to the new federal...
This article examines party-based Euroscepticism in the candidate states of Central and Eastern Euro...
The article falls into three parts: an introduction that points to some general links between Europe...
Most of the literature on communist-successor parties has focused on their successful return to powe...
The “Ex-communist party ” label has often been used to describe the political ideas and political be...
Defence date: 30 November 2009Examining Board: Attila Agh (Corvinus University, Budapest); Michael K...
Byla provedena analýza vývoje dvou postkomunistických stran - KSČM a Die Linke, která prokázala, že ...
How do political parties in Central and Eastern Europe position themselves on European integration? ...
This article deals with immigration policy of relevant Czech political parties: the Czech Social Dem...
The collapse of communism in late 1989 released the Czechs to freely consider and shape the social a...
This article gauges how plausible deep historical explanations are in accounting for the emergence o...
The paper concentrates on attitudes to the enlargement and the future of EU held by relevant politic...
Communist successor parties in central Europe are not a homogeneous group of political actors. Proce...
In his article the author makes an attempt to analyze the campaigns of modernization of the Europea...
Coalition formation in the Federal Republic of Germany has, following unification in 1990, become a ...
After the German reunification, the West German party system has been transferred to the new federal...
This article examines party-based Euroscepticism in the candidate states of Central and Eastern Euro...
The article falls into three parts: an introduction that points to some general links between Europe...
Most of the literature on communist-successor parties has focused on their successful return to powe...
The “Ex-communist party ” label has often been used to describe the political ideas and political be...
Defence date: 30 November 2009Examining Board: Attila Agh (Corvinus University, Budapest); Michael K...
Byla provedena analýza vývoje dvou postkomunistických stran - KSČM a Die Linke, která prokázala, že ...
How do political parties in Central and Eastern Europe position themselves on European integration? ...
This article deals with immigration policy of relevant Czech political parties: the Czech Social Dem...
The collapse of communism in late 1989 released the Czechs to freely consider and shape the social a...
This article gauges how plausible deep historical explanations are in accounting for the emergence o...
The paper concentrates on attitudes to the enlargement and the future of EU held by relevant politic...
Communist successor parties in central Europe are not a homogeneous group of political actors. Proce...