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Thirteen essays by noted authorities, including Ferenc Glatz, Laszlo Szarka, Pal Peter Toth, and Judit Toth, cover such topics as the history of minority policies in Hungary, immigration and xenophobia from the middle to the end of the twentieth century, and the concept of the nation at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
Laszlo Szarka is the director of the Institute for Ethnic and Minority Studies in Budapest.
Preface to the Series and Acknowledgements Historical-Sociological Background New Paths and Goals for Minority Policies, by Ferenc Glatz Articificial Communities and an Unprotected Protective Power: The Trianon Peace Treaty and the Minorities, by Laszlo Szarka Changing Ethnic Patterns in the Carpatho-Pannonian Region (1989-2002), by Karoly Kocsis Historical Patterns of Public Thinking about the Hungarian Diaspora, by Pal Tamas The Changing Image of Hungary Minority Governance in Central and Eastern Europe (With Special View on the Autonomy Drafts of the Hungarian Minorities), by Kinga Gal Hungarians in the Voivodina: Communication with Hungary and Public Opinion about the Mother Country, by Karoly Mirnics The Changing Image of Hungary among the Hungarians of Sub-Carpathia, 1944-1991, by Kalman Soos Maintaining Relations and the Problem of Immigration Minorities, Communications and Integration into the Western World, by Herbert Kupper Summits and Everyday Life, by A. Zoltan Biro Why Just Hungary?, by Pal Peter Toth Xenophobia in Hungary in 1998, by Endre Sik Aspects of Analyzing the Minority Problem Aspects of Analyzing the Minority Problem, by Judit Toth The Concept of the Nation in the Late Twentieth Century: Aspects of an Analysis, by Laszlo Szarka Bibliography Contributors Biographies of Key Personalities Name Index Place Index Volumes Published in "Atlantic Studies on Society in Change"