"Given the difficulty of the ethnographic study of far right, resulting from far-right groups’ lack of openness and suspiciousness, a vast part of the project was spent on research, meaning: establishing contacts, gaining/negotiating access, and eventually beginning fieldwork. Dr. Pasieka conducted fieldwork in Poland, Italy, Slovakia and Hungary. The ethnographic study was supplemented by the analysis of press materials and social media. The second research component consisted of archival research. Thanks to the cooperation with historians from the Institute for East European History, Dr. Pasieka broadened her theoretical and methodological framework. Drawing on historians' guidance, she conducted archival research carried out in Vienna, Warsaw, Lviv, and Trieste, i.e. in the cities were multiethnic before the World War II and as such prove to be interesting venues for checking the extent of “transnational-nationalist” orientation of various nationalist activities.
Apart from conducting research and developing her research skills, Dr. Pasieka gained new experience in teaching thanks to new courses offered at the Institute for East European History and thanks to the work with students at the Central European University. In terms of disseminating her research and further developing her presentation skills and professional networks, she participated in several international conferencse, gave invited talks (University of Bern, Hannah Arendt Center for the Study of Totalitarianism in Dresden, University of Vienna, Institute of Human Sciences in Vienna, Jagiellonian University in Krakow) and delivered two keynote speeches at international conferences in Szeged and Budapest. She organized an interdisciplinary and international conference on transnational far right (“Transnationalization of the far right: the case of interwar and present-day Europe” ) and two guest lectures' series. She has published on journal article and one opinion piece for a broader audience, and she has submitted for review a book chapter. She is currently working on a special issue on transnational far right and two journal publications.
Thanks to the work carried out within the project, she was successful in obtaining a new academic position: Elise Richter Research Fellowship at the Department of Anthropology, University of Vienna. In course of this fellowship, she will expand her project on transnational far right which is supposed to lead to her ""Habilitation.""
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