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EN
Along with the political, social and political changes in Bulgaria and Romania, new threads have appeared in the debate on identity since the early 1990s. From one side, it was the result of challenges and threats in the dimension of foreign policy and security of these two countries, and on the other side – the result of new opportunities that emerged in front of Bulgaria and Romania in the generally changed geopolitical situation. It seems that Romania remains more consistent and expressive in its choices. In turn, Bulgaria has undergone a greater evolution, and given the level from which it began after 1989, maybe even a revolution in the perception of its European identity.
EN
In the second half of the twentieth century saw a rapid development of the Vietnamese immigration to the Czech Republic (formerly Czechoslovakia). Today, as a result of migration, the Vietnamese constitute one of the largest ethnic minority groups in the Czech Republic. This is a group with a specific position and character. On one side, the Vietnamese community has a typical immigrant character, and on the other side, since 2013 Vietnamese people are considered to as a national minority. Therefore, their situation could described as a state of suspension between isolation and integration.
EN
The immigration crisis has in recent years become the leitmotif of electoral campaigns in the states of the Three Seas Initiative. Politicians do not avoid anti-immigration rhetoric, presenting immigration, mainly from the Middle East and Africa, as the greatest threat to their countries today. They create an extremely negative image of immigrants coming to Europe, generally identified as Muslims. This was the case, e.g. during the last elections in Hungary, Slovakia or the Czech Republic. This last case is the subject of analysis in this article. The author investigates the causes and effects of this phenomenon and highlights the topics related to immigration that dominated the 2017 and 2018 electoral campaigns.
EN
The People’s Party Our Slovakia (Ľudová strana Naše Slovensko) is one of the most popular parties in Slovakia. It belongs to the movements of the extreme right. Its leader – Marian Kotleba is one of the best known Slovak politicians. One of the reasons for the popularity of Kotleba and his party seems to be the use of populist slogans by the movement. The article describes the activities and slogans of the People’s Party Our Slovakia, in which the combination of the slogans of the extreme right and populist ones is most visible.
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