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ID 63485
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Political, Economic, and Social Changes since the System Transformation Period in Poland: Doctrinal Trends of the Catholic Church and the Rise of Populism
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Author
Iemoto, Hiroichi
Taguchi, Masahiro
Abstract
This paper describes the doctrinal trends of the Catholic Church and the rise of populist politics by analyzing the political, economic, and social changes that have occurred since the system transformation period.
In 1989, Poland became the first socialist country to establish a non-communist government and led the system transformations in Eastern European countries. Politically, Poland has broken the communist dictatorship and introduced political pluralism, economically she has promoted market liberalization, and socially she has achieved democratization and cultural pluralism. However, politicians, while superficially advocating political pluralism, often engaged in a battle of mutual accusations through “lustration,” which refers to policies that limit the participation of former communists, especially informants of the communist secret police, resulting in political chaos. In recent years, under the “Law and Justice” regime, Catholic traditions and conservative national and family values have been honored as values that must be upheld by Poles, while EU skepticism has been propagated, anti-immigrant sentiments have been fanned, and the clampdown on LGBT people has been tightened. Conflicts with the EU have also intensified, including political intervention in the judiciary and the supremacy of domestic law over EU law. Put simply, Law and Justice, while claiming to reintroduce pluralism into a Polish polity dominated by the monolithic technocratic liberalism that was dominant in the early years of the transition, has in fact empowered social groups that felt excluded from the post-1989 reforms to create a more exclusive monism.
Thus, while Poland received international attention as a country that led the way in democratization among the former Eastern European countries, even today pluralism has not taken stable root. In Chapter 1, the political and economic situation and changes of doctrine of the Church during the transition period will be analyzed. In Chapter 2, the political changes during the EU accession period and the church’s search for its position will mentioned. The chapter 3 will analyze the rise of populism after 2015 and its relationship to the Catholic Church.
Note
論説 (Articles)
Publication Title
Okayama Economic Review
Published Date
2022-05-20
Volume
volume53
Issue
issue3
Publisher
岡山大学経済学会
Publisher Alternative
The Economic Association of Okayama University
Start Page
21
End Page
44
ISSN
2433-4146
NCID
AN00032897
Content Type
Journal Article
OAI-PMH Set
岡山大学
language
Japanese
Copyright Holders
Copyright © 2022 岡山大学経済学会
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Eprints Journal Name
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