Illiberal Hungary has become famous in recent years for paying families to have, or pledge to have, children. This, writes Eva Fodor, has transformed the criteria and practice for social citizenship and democratic participation
Professor of Gender Studies, Central European University Vienna
Eva is a sociologist by training and persuasion, and has written two books and numerous articles on gender, labour markets, welfare states and illiberalism, with a focus on gender inequality in the post-state socialist region.
She is also involved in research on the domestic division of labour during the Covid-19 pandemic, as well as on questions related to labour control, workplace democracy, and the motherhood penalty in our post-pandemic world.
The Gender Regime of Anti-Liberal Hungary
Palgrave MacMillan, 2022, open access
Analyses some of the critical and alarming social consequences of Hungary’s recent illiberal turn
The Loop
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