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CEU: a bastion for democracy in an illiberal world?

Twenty-five years after it was founded to promote openness in the post-Soviet era, the Central European University is grappling with new threats to democracy

Published on
March 30, 2016
Last updated
January 20, 2020
Man using pickaxe to break down Berlin Wall, 1989
Source: Alamy
Changing world: 鈥榯here is certainly no one formula for an open society鈥, says CEU鈥檚 president John Shattuck

In 1991, new democracies were emerging across Central and Eastern Europe after the collapse of communist regimes across the region. Two years earlier, the US political scientist Francis Fukuyama famously suggested that the world had reached 鈥渢he end point of mankind鈥檚 ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of human government鈥 in his essay 鈥淭he End of History?鈥

During this triumphal year for democracy the Budapest-based Central European University (CEU), created to help ease the transition from communism in the region by studying open society and human rights, was founded.

Twenty-five years on, the university has about 1,400 master鈥檚 and doctoral-level students and nearly 400 faculty members from more than 130 countries. Set up to train 鈥渇uture leaders鈥, it specialises in public policy, law, management, the humanities and social sciences.

But its mission to promote an 鈥渙pen society鈥 looks increasingly imperilled by events. Nationalist governments are on the ascendancy in Poland and Hungary, democracy is failing in Russia, Islamic terrorism is menacing Europe and the Middle East, and authoritarian China is challenging the United States for economic supremacy.

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Even Professor Fukuyama has changed his emphasis: his latest book, Political Order and Political Decay, while still arguing democracy鈥檚 case in places, puts just as much stress on an effective state and the rule of law as the ballot box.聽

The principles of academic freedom and open society are today even more 鈥渦nder assault鈥 than they were when the CEU was founded, John Shattuck, president and rector, told 探花视频.

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The fact that the world has failed to converge towards liberal democracy since the fall of the Soviet Union has 鈥渂roadened our inquiry鈥, he says, and spurred the CEU to research illiberal as well as liberal governments.

What constitutes an open society is not as 鈥渟et and understood鈥 as it once was in the early 1990s, Shattuck, a former US assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor, says. 鈥淭here is certainly no one formula for an open society.鈥

Since its foundation, the focus of the university has broadened away from advancing an open society in Central and Eastern Europe. 鈥淭hat was the mission at the beginning,鈥 he explains. 鈥淏ut as we鈥檝e grown we鈥檝e become truly global in our scope.鈥

Half the university鈥檚 students still come from the region, but the rest are from North America, Western Europe and increasingly from South America. About 15 students a year come from China.

Many of the CEU鈥檚 courses are focused on public policy and creating 鈥渇uture leaders鈥, Shattuck says. Alumni go on to become ministers, ambassadors and work for international organisations.

The CEU boasts a 鈧550 million (拢434 million) endowment, and was initially funded by donations from the financier George Soros, who has given extensively to promote democracy in the countries orbiting the former Soviet Union.

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A backer like Soros and a pro-democracy mission might not make the CEU the best training ground for students hoping to land a job at, say, the Kremlin after graduation. 聽

鈥淚t can be challenging for some of our students when they return,鈥 Shattuck admits. 鈥淲e have two graduates in Azerbaijan who are currently political prisoners鈥 after entering the political fray there, he says.

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However, about half a dozen CEU alumni are now serving in the government of Hungary鈥檚 controversial, and arguably pretty illiberal, prime minister, Viktor Orb谩n. Asked whether he is proud of them, Shattuck says: 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a good thing that we have a broad range of alumni鈥, and he believes it is important that the CEU is 鈥渘ot seen to be uniform鈥 in the outlook of its graduates.

鈥淭he most important thing we teach our students is critical thinking,鈥 he insists, a skill that could be seen as the exact opposite of the doctrinaire Marxism that prevailed in the region鈥檚 universities before the demise of the Soviet bloc. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to indoctrinate anyone, quite the contrary.鈥

The CEU is now tackling Europe鈥檚 latest challenge 鈥 the millions of migrants that have arrived from the Middle East and elsewhere. It provides a weekend programme of English language training, 鈥渃ultural orientation鈥 and regional history for registered refugees in Hungary as a way of helping them integrate.

鈥淭he world is in the process of being transformed by these new migrations,鈥 says Shattuck. Over the next five years, he wants the CEU to become a major centre for the study of migration.

Two days after speaking to THE, Shattuck delivered a speech at the University of Cambridge where he forecast an 鈥渆xtended winter for democracy鈥.

But he still found reasons for hope, ending by quoting former Czech leader V谩clav Havel: 鈥淚鈥檓 not an optimist because I don鈥檛 believe all ends well. I鈥檓 not a pessimist because I don鈥檛 believe all ends badly. Instead, I鈥檓 a realist who carries hope, and hope is the belief that democracy has meaning, and is worth the struggle.鈥

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david.matthews@tesglobal.com

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Print headline: CEU鈥檚 democratic mission under threat

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