Publications of Dr. Bartek Pytlas (Selected)
Monographs
- (under contract): Lehrbuch Rechtsradikale Politik in Europa. Stuttgart: UTB.
- Pytlas, Bartek (2016): Radical Right Parties in Central and Eastern Europe: Mainstream Party Competition and Electoral Fortune. Abingdon: Routledge. [Paperback edition 2017]. (Review: Political Studies Review 15(1): here)
The monograph has received the Gero Erdmann Comparative Area Studies Award 2018 (Award of Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft/Governance and Politics and the German Political Science Association).
Articles and contributions to edited volumes
- Beyond Populism: The Diversity of Thin Anti-Establishment Contestation in Turbulent Times'. In: Party Politics (accepted for publication).*
- 2021: 'Party Organisation of PiS in Poland: Between Electoral Rhetoric and Absolutist Practice'. In: Politics and Governance 9 (4), 340-353. https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v9i4.4479
- 2021: ‘Hijacking Europe: Counter-European strategies and radical right mainstreaming during the humanitarian crisis debate 2015-16’. In: JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies 59(2), 335-353 https://doi.org/10.1111/jcms.13092
- 2021. ‘Erodierung von Demokratie und Populismus an der Macht in Mittel- und Osteuropa’. In: Muno, W./ Pfeiffer, Ch. (eds.) Populismus an der Macht. Wiesbaden: VS Springer.
- 2021 'From Mainstream to Power: The Law and Justice Party in Poland'. In: Decker, F./Henningsen, B./Lewandowsky, M./Adorf, P. (Hrsg.) Aufstand der Außenseiter. Die Herausforderung der europäischen Politik durch den neuen Populismus. Baden-Baden: Nomos, 401-414.
- Pytlas, Bartek (with Sarah Engler and Kevin Deegan-Krause) (2019) "Assessing the diversity of anti-establishment and populist politics in Central and Eastern Europe". In: West European Politics 42(6), 1310-1336.
- Pytlas, Bartek (2019): ‘Wettstreit um Deutung: Rechtsradikale Politik und narrativer Parteienwettbewerb am Beispiel der Slowakei und Ungarn / Contest over Meaning: Radical Right Politics and Narrative Party Competition in Slovakia and Hungary after 2015’. In: Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft, 13(1), 5-31.
- Pytlas, Bartek (2018): "Radical Right Politics in East and West: Distinctive yet Equivalent". In: Sociology Compass, 12(11).
- Pytlas, Bartek (2018): "Populist Radical Right Mainstreaming and Challenges to Democracy in an Enlarged Europe". In: Herman, L./Muldoon, J. (eds.): Trumping the Mainstream. The Conquest of Democratic Politics by the Populist Radical Right. Abingdon: Routledge, 164-185.
- Pytlas, Bartek (with Oliver Kossack) (2015): “Lighting the Fuse: the Impact of Radical Right Parties on Party Competition in Central and Eastern Europe”. In: Minkenberg, Michael (Ed.): Transforming the Transformation? The East European Radical Right in the Political Process. Abingdon: Routledge, 105-136.
- Pytlas, Bartek (with Aleksandra Moroska) (2014): “European Issues as a Domestic Proxy: The Case of the German Federal Election 2013”. EPERN Working Paper No. 27. Sussex European Institute, 1-37.
- Pytlas, Bartek (2013): “Radical-right narratives in Slovakia and Hungary: historical legacies, mythic overlaying and contemporary politics”. In: Patterns of Prejudice 47 (2), 162-183.
- Pytlas, Bartek (with Michael Minkenberg) (2012): “The Radical Right in Central and Eastern Europe: Class Politics in Classless Societies?”. In: Rydgren, Jens (Ed.): Class Politics and the Radical Right. Abingdon: Routledge, 206-223.
- Pytlas, Bartek (with Timm Beichelt) (2010): “Mittelosteuropa und der Euro”. In: Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte 43, 33-38.
Contribution to Academic Blogs and Press Reports
- “Zeitgeist der Bedrohung und Politisierung der Unsicherheit”. Huffington Post Deutschland, 29. March 2016.
- “Facing Up to the Radical Right: Lessons from Central and Eastern Europe”. Policy Network, 28. January 2016.
- “Hungary, Poland and Slovakia show the risks associated with mainstream parties co-opting the platforms of the radical right”. LSE EUROPP Blog, 3. November 2015.
- “The Polish presidential election highlights increasing disenchantment with the country’s political establishment”. LSE EUROPP Blog, 19. May 2015.