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Framing Kinstate Policies: Public Arena and Scholarly Debates. Focus on CEE and Hungary.
Esemény időpontja:
- 2022-05-26 09:00:00
- 2022-05-27 09:30:00

Thursday, May 26
Venue: Sapientia University (400193 Cluj-Napoca, Calea Turzii/ Tordai út 4.), Room B301
Registration and conference opening // 9:00 – 9:30
Tibor Toró (Associate Professor, Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania)
Tamás Kiss (Researcher, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities)
Key-note speech // 9:30 – 11:00
Zsuzsa Csergő (Queen’s University): Kin-state involvement as a double-edged sword
COFFEE BREAK
- panel: Historical perspectives // 11:15 – 13:15
Adriana Cupcea: Religious soft power in Turkey’s kin state policy in the Balkans. A Comparative Approach of the Muslim Communities in Kosovo and Dobruja (Romania)
Giuseppe Motta: Kin States and international institutions in interwar Europe. Germany, Hungary, and the League of Nations [Online presentation]
János Kristóf Murádin: Northern Transylvania in the Hungarian Government's kinstate policies between 1940 and 1944
Andrea Carteny: Territorial autonomy and dual citizenship: a comparison between minorities in South Tyrol, Istria and Transylvania [Online presentation]
LUNCH
- panel: Europeanization and bilateralism // 14:45 – 17:15
Gergely Romsics: Trianonspeak meets Europeanization: Norm entrepreneurship and failure in the reframing of kin state policies in Hungary
Gyöngyi Schwarz: Transnational development constructions in operational programmes: a ‘cuckoo in the nest’ or a new systemic element in EU development policy?
Balázs Vizi: Participation of minority organisations in bilateral state relations: the cases of Slovenia, Hungary, and Italy
Myra Waterbury: Hungarian Kin-State Policies Between Divided and Global Nationhood: Assessing Recent Developments
COFFEE BREAK
Round table discussion: Effects Orbán’s kin-state policy in Transylvania // 17:00 – 19:00
Myra Waterbury, Department of Political Science, Ohio University
Tamás Kiss, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities
Levente Salat, Babeș-Bolyai University
George Jiglău, Babeș-Bolyai University
Moderator: Tibor Toró, Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania
Reception at Sapientia University // 19:30
Friday, May 27
Venue: Sapientia University (400193 Cluj-Napoca, Calea Turzii/ Tordai út 4.), Room B301
- panel: Securitization // 9:30 – 11:30
Zsuzsa Csergő: The impact of securitization in minority political agency. Hungarians and Russian speakers in Central and Eastern Europe
Szabolcs Pogonyi: Multiple kin-states and multiple kin-minorities: the spillover effect
Tibor Toró: In Orbán we trust? Perception of Russia’s War in Ukraine among Transylvanian Hungarians
Andreea Udrea: A Security Conundrum in European Kin-State Politics: The (Mis)Recognition of Vlachs and Romanian-Serbian Relations [Online presentation]
COFFEE BREAK
- panel Forms of (Neo)Nationalism // 11:45 – 13:45
Ágnes Patakfalvi-Czirják: Singalong as a cultural policy. The Populist Aesthetic and the Use of Hungarian Propaganda Songs between 2010–2020
Krisztina Rácz: Kins and Relatives in front of the Store: Virtual Homecoming to a Vojvodina Hungarian Village [Online presentation]
Tamás Kiss: Xenophobia against kin. Native Hungarian attitudes toward Hungarian minority communities
Gyöngyi Schwarcz: Bipolar communication on nationhood and belonging. Hungarian kin-minorities in the social media in Hungary
LUNCH
- panel: Dimensions of Hungarian kin-state activism // 15:15 – 17:15
Dániel Gazsó: Kin-State Activism in Central and Eastern Europe: The Case of Hungary and Its Diaspora Engagement Practices
Zoltán Kántor: Hungary's kin-state policy: the administrative system
Edith Oltay: The Reconstruction of the Hungarian Nation
Orsolya Sarány: “What happened at Úz Valley was disgraceful, illegal and profoundly immoral” – kinstate political discourses and their interpretation in the press of the nationalizing state and national minority. The case of the Úz Valley military cemetery [Online presentation]
COFFEE BREAK
Round table discussion: Regional identity-building in the Székelyland // 17:30 – 19:30
Dragoș Dragoman, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu
Ágnes Patakfalvi-Czirják, Budapest University of Technology and Economics
István Gergő Székely, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities
Valér Veres, Babeș-Bolyai University
Moderator: Tamás Kiss, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities
Closing dinner, Rhédey Café // 20:3

Thursday, May 26
Venue: Sapientia University (400193 Cluj-Napoca, Calea Turzii/ Tordai út 4.), Room B301
Registration and conference opening // 9:00 – 9:30
Tibor Toró (Associate Professor, Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania)
Tamás Kiss (Researcher, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities)
Key-note speech // 9:30 – 11:00
Zsuzsa Csergő (Queen’s University): Kin-state involvement as a double-edged sword
COFFEE BREAK
- panel: Historical perspectives // 11:15 – 13:15
Adriana Cupcea: Religious soft power in Turkey’s kin state policy in the Balkans. A Comparative Approach of the Muslim Communities in Kosovo and Dobruja (Romania)
Giuseppe Motta: Kin States and international institutions in interwar Europe. Germany, Hungary, and the League of Nations [Online presentation]
János Kristóf Murádin: Northern Transylvania in the Hungarian Government's kinstate policies between 1940 and 1944
Andrea Carteny: Territorial autonomy and dual citizenship: a comparison between minorities in South Tyrol, Istria and Transylvania [Online presentation]
LUNCH
- panel: Europeanization and bilateralism // 14:45 – 17:15
Gergely Romsics: Trianonspeak meets Europeanization: Norm entrepreneurship and failure in the reframing of kin state policies in Hungary
Gyöngyi Schwarz: Transnational development constructions in operational programmes: a ‘cuckoo in the nest’ or a new systemic element in EU development policy?
Balázs Vizi: Participation of minority organisations in bilateral state relations: the cases of Slovenia, Hungary, and Italy
Myra Waterbury: Hungarian Kin-State Policies Between Divided and Global Nationhood: Assessing Recent Developments
COFFEE BREAK
Round table discussion: Effects Orbán’s kin-state policy in Transylvania // 17:00 – 19:00
Myra Waterbury, Department of Political Science, Ohio University
Tamás Kiss, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities
Levente Salat, Babeș-Bolyai University
George Jiglău, Babeș-Bolyai University
Moderator: Tibor Toró, Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania
Reception at Sapientia University // 19:30
Friday, May 27
Venue: Sapientia University (400193 Cluj-Napoca, Calea Turzii/ Tordai út 4.), Room B301
- panel: Securitization // 9:30 – 11:30
Zsuzsa Csergő: The impact of securitization in minority political agency. Hungarians and Russian speakers in Central and Eastern Europe
Szabolcs Pogonyi: Multiple kin-states and multiple kin-minorities: the spillover effect
Tibor Toró: In Orbán we trust? Perception of Russia’s War in Ukraine among Transylvanian Hungarians
Andreea Udrea: A Security Conundrum in European Kin-State Politics: The (Mis)Recognition of Vlachs and Romanian-Serbian Relations [Online presentation]
COFFEE BREAK
- panel Forms of (Neo)Nationalism // 11:45 – 13:45
Ágnes Patakfalvi-Czirják: Singalong as a cultural policy. The Populist Aesthetic and the Use of Hungarian Propaganda Songs between 2010–2020
Krisztina Rácz: Kins and Relatives in front of the Store: Virtual Homecoming to a Vojvodina Hungarian Village [Online presentation]
Tamás Kiss: Xenophobia against kin. Native Hungarian attitudes toward Hungarian minority communities
Gyöngyi Schwarcz: Bipolar communication on nationhood and belonging. Hungarian kin-minorities in the social media in Hungary
LUNCH
- panel: Dimensions of Hungarian kin-state activism // 15:15 – 17:15
Dániel Gazsó: Kin-State Activism in Central and Eastern Europe: The Case of Hungary and Its Diaspora Engagement Practices
Zoltán Kántor: Hungary's kin-state policy: the administrative system
Edith Oltay: The Reconstruction of the Hungarian Nation
Orsolya Sarány: “What happened at Úz Valley was disgraceful, illegal and profoundly immoral” – kinstate political discourses and their interpretation in the press of the nationalizing state and national minority. The case of the Úz Valley military cemetery [Online presentation]
COFFEE BREAK
Round table discussion: Regional identity-building in the Székelyland // 17:30 – 19:30
Dragoș Dragoman, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu
Ágnes Patakfalvi-Czirják, Budapest University of Technology and Economics
István Gergő Székely, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities
Valér Veres, Babeș-Bolyai University
Moderator: Tamás Kiss, Romanian Institute for Research on National Minorities
Closing dinner, Rhédey Café // 20:3