On the Other Side of the Curtain: A Reassessment of Non-Elite Human Rights Experiences and Values in Poland |
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Authors: | Brian Grodsky |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Political Science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, 9405 N. Penfield Road, Columbia, MD 21045, USA |
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Abstract: | In this paper, I explore the formation of human rights attitudes among what I call the “silent majority” in the post-communist countries of Central Europe and the former Soviet Union. This is the large, diverse group of people never directly confronted with harsh methods of repression under communism. I argue here that the foundations for conceptualizing human rights are based on the degree and saliency of exposure to rights violations and that, for many citizens of Central and Eastern Europe, life behind the “iron curtain” is associated with relatively fewer rights violations than life after the iron curtain’s fall. Comparative personal experiences will play a key role in explaining how these citizens conceptualize human rights. I test this argument by applying it to the cases of Poland, where I conducted a total of 68 randomly selected non-elite interviews in an effort to probe for key factors defining individuals’ conceptions of human rights. |
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Keywords: | Public opinion Post-communist Communism Human rights Poland Central Europe |
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