Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe
1996 - 2025
Current editor(s): Andrew Kilmister From Taylor & Francis Journals Bibliographic data for series maintained by Chris Longhurst (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 33, issue 3, 2025
- Wartime transformation of advertising discourse in Ukraine: a cultural perspective on civilian soft power pp. 559-582

- Nataliia Kochkina, Sofiia Katsiuba, Olena Kanishchenko and Gianluca Gatto
- Participatory budgeting under martial law: the case of Ivano-Frankivsk pp. 583-603

- Oleh Brovko and Norbert Kersting
- Rural elites and their resource politics: glocal livelihood strategies in Transcarpathia, Western Ukraine pp. 605-634

- Sándor Borbély
- The future of deindustrialization – a social and cultural turn? The future of former industrial landscapes and industrial societies in Central Eastern Europe pp. 635-644

- Tibor Valuch
- The Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW): a new party launches in Germany pp. 645-662

- David F. Patton
- From margins to bridges: Romanian perspectives in decolonizing China studies pp. 663-692

- Iulia Elena Cîndea
- Patterns of participation in the college movement: tendencies of political socialization of the youth in 1980s Hungary pp. 693-712

- Patrik Mravik
- Dysfunctional Pedagogy between historical practice and legal norms: educational violence and rights in physical education and sports pp. 713-731

- Pál Hamar, István Soós, Ian Whyte, Lívia Borosán, Yvette Budainé Csepela, Boros-Balint Iuliana and Ákos Cserny
- Neoliberalism restaged: austerity and the politics of threat in Romania pp. 733-745

- Alex Cistelecan and Stefan Baghiu
- Vergessene Ungleichheiten: Biographische Erzählungen ostdeutscher Professor*innen pp. 747-751

- Dina Gusejnova
- Remembering the Neoliberal Turn: Economic Change and Collective Memory in Eastern Europe after 1989 pp. 752-754

- Dániel Mikecz
Volume 33, issue 2, 2025
- Paradoxes of historical revisionism in the authoritarian states pp. 289-299

- Tatyjana Szafonova
- Medievalisms from top to bottom: Alexander Nevsky in Russian public contemporary discourse in the case of Vyborg (2018–2022) pp. 301-320

- Olga Kalashnikova and Aleksandr Rusanov
- Nevruz and the Grey Wolf: from one revisionism to another pp. 321-339

- Aurélie Stern
- Siberian shamans: Hungarian origin-seekers, and contemporary historical revisionism - the changing world around Vilmos Diószegi pp. 341-358

- István Sántha and László Lajtai
- Ethnography of DIY revisionism: unfinished reburials and right-wing populism in Hungary pp. 359-374

- Tatyjana Szafonova
- Social cohesion and the inclination towards conspiracy mentality: comparing Germany and the Visegrad countries pp. 375-401

- Carina Hartz, Franziska Deutsch, Klaus Boehnke, Martina Klicperova-Baker, Ivan Brezina, Jakub Šrol, Vladimíra K. Čavojová, Zoltán Jakab, Wojciech Przybylski, Miles R. Maftean and Agnieszka Turska-Kawa
- Speaking Europe, shutting doors: legitimation of exclusionary migration policies in Slovakia during the 2015 Schengen crisis pp. 403-423

- Kristián Földes
- Wellbeing and environmental performance of the Visegrad countries at the beginning of the 21st century pp. 425-440

- Csaba Lakócai
- State expenditures and varieties of capitalism in East Central Europe pp. 441-464

- Tamás T. Csontos
- From environmentalism to activism: comparing environmentalist students and Fridays for Future protesters in Hungary pp. 465-481

- Dániel Mikecz
- Academic freedom and dissent in higher education: the case of Hungary pp. 483-499

- Balázs Majtényi and Andrew Ryder
- The labour market relevance of soft skills of students in business higher education (based on a Hungarian and Czech empirical study) pp. 501-514

- Juhász Tímea, Alena Čarvašová and Petr Řehoř
- Not quite “the same enemies and the same friends”: exploring puppet-overlord enemy-crafting in the Donbass and Russia pp. 515-531

- Rodrigo Melgar and José Antonio Saravia
- A scoping review of studies on ruscism: tracing the academic and political evolution of a controversial term pp. 533-543

- Serhii Nazarovets
- Agency, hybridity, microhistory: how is Putin supporting Latour? pp. 545-550

- István M. Szijártó
- The left in the German election 2025 pp. 551-555

- Thies Gleiss
- The forgotten revolution: the 1919 Hungarian Republic of Councils pp. 557-558

- Darina Macková
Volume 33, issue 1, 2025
- Situating do-it-yourself: a hybridizing perspective from central and Eastern Europe pp. 1-14

- Petr Gibas, Blanka Nyklová and Karel Šima
- DIY modernity: rethinking socialist experience from the temporal perspective pp. 15-30

- Zinaida Vasilyeva
- Anti-kitsch, or how to make a socialist doily: DIY, folk art, and “open” materialities in late-socialist Slovakia pp. 31-45

- Nicolette Makovicky
- DIY and the emergent materiality of home-making on a holiday caravan site pp. 47-61

- Petr Gibas, Karolína Pauknerová and Tereza Hodúlová
- Commentary pp. 63-67

- Reinhild Kreis
- Paths (not) taken: promoting R&D in Central and Eastern Europe pp. 69-85

- Alexander Strelkov, Fadi Hirzalla and Vsevolod Samokhvalov
- Le sujet supposé agir: assessing local agency and structural determinacy in socialist and postsocialist Europe pp. 87-108

- Alexandru Cistelecan
- Framing corruption in Ukraine: a two-decade scoping review of academic and organizational perspectives pp. 109-128

- Demyan Belyaev, Jean-Patrick Villeneuve and Giulia Mugellini
- Coping with a crisis: the relationship between citizenship and mental health as experienced by LGBTQ population in Poland pp. 129-146

- Maria Obrebska
- The Albanian Left. Exploration of its paradigm of values and democracy outcomes pp. 147-165

- Florian Çullhaj
- The global polycrisis and the Romanian elections of 2024 pp. 167-179

- Alex Cistelecan, Costi Rogozanu, Adina Marincea, Adrian Grama, Elena Trifan, Stefan Baghiu, Alexandra Mercescu and Cosmin Cercel
- Annotated chronology of the Romanian political scene pp. 181-188

- Alex Cistelecan
- Class dynamics in the Romanian ideological landscape: the 2024 presidential elections as self-colonization pp. 189-199

- Costi Rogozanu
- Romania’s 2024 election crisis: neo-legionarism’s revival of the “Judeo-Bolshevism” myth and the jouissance of punishment pp. 201-209

- Adina Marincea
- The revenge of civil society pp. 211-219

- Adrian Grama
- From self-help to sovereignty: the rise of Călin Georgescu and Romania’s far-right mysticism pp. 221-233

- Elena Trifan
- Loony platform politics: the Romanian far-right performance and the digital dystopia of 2024 pp. 235-249

- Stefan Baghiu
- The Romanian Constitutional Court doing “militant democracy” (twice and more to come) pp. 251-261

- Alexandra Mercescu
- Emergency brake: law, history, and Romania’s constitutional crisis pp. 263-273

- Cosmin Cercel
- Searching for the voices of Russian colonialism in post-Soviet Central Asia pp. 275-280

- István Sántha
- Studies in Hungarian ethnography for a European ethnology pp. 281-283

- Eszter Bartha
- Political economy of Hungarian authoritarian populism: capitalists without the right kind of capital pp. 283-286

- Bálint Madlovics
- Émigré, exile, diaspora, and transnational movements of the Crimean Tatars: Preserving the eternal flame of Crimea pp. 286-288

- Ahmet Ertan Çölgeçen
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