CEU faculty and university administrators have appeared in the international media lately on topics as diverse as the globalization of academia and Latvia’s Tomato Rebellion. CEU President and Rector John Shattuck spoke about Ukraine's sovereignty on Radio Free Europe, Head of the Department of Political Science Gabor Toka discussed Roma rights and the recent elections in Hungary in Al Jazeera, and Head of the Department of Legal Studies Renata Uitz talked about religious freedom in Hungary on Classical 89 Radio at Utah's Brigham Young University.
Director of CEU's Center for EU Enlargement Studies Peter Balazs gave interviews to Le Monde, the Financial Times, and Deutschlandfunk (radio) regarding the Hungarian elections. Zoltan Miklosi and Szabolcs Pogonyi, assistant professors in the Department of Political Science and the Nationalism Studies Program, respectively, are quoted in election-related stories in the Associated Press, Le Monde, and AFP (French Press Agency). Amy Brouillette, director of the European Media Project at the Center for Media and Communication Studies at the School of Public Policy, published an opinion piece on Al-Jazeera's website entitled "Hungary Elections: How the Media Failed the People."
CEU faculty and university administrators were also featured in the Hungarian media. The April issue of Hungarian Forbes features an interview with CEU Business School Dean Mel Horwitch. Political weekly HVG and Hungarian Sunday paper, Vasarnapi Hirek, together with the political daily Nepszabadsag reported in detail about the research of Levente Littvay, assistant professor in the Department of Political Science, on twins and political behavior. Associate Professor of Gender Studies Andrea Peto spoke to the Hungarian weekly portal 168ora Online about gender imbalance following the Hungarian elections.
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For more on Hungarian media articles, visit http://www.ceu.hu/taxonomy/term/110





