Yearbook XI, 2003. Hungary in the Present (Publications in Hungarian)
Edited by János M. Rainer and Éva Standeisky, Gyöngyvér Török
Editor responsible: Gyöngyvér Török
THE NINETEEN-SIXTIES
The Sixties
Péter Kende: What happened to Hungarian society after 1956?
János M. Rainer: Signs of life—nineteen sixty-eight
János Tischler: ‘Any self-respecting bookkeeper on an agricultural cooperative embezzles more than these 23 people have done between them.’ The Ónody case before the Central Committee of the Hungarian Socialist Workers’ Party in March 1965
Tibor Valuch: From plentiful destitution to destitute plenty. Changes in consumption in Hungary in the years after 1956
Pál Germuska: The beginnings of Hungarian arms exports to the Middle East
State security dossier—the ÁVOs
Gyula Kozák: Man without an identity
Virág Udvarnoky: ‘I’ve had enough life-story already!’
Attila Szakolczai: Endre Márton and state security
Pot-pourri
Krisztián Ungváry: A Hungarian institution: the research institute into the Jewish question
Márkus Keller: Paths and memories
Éva Standeisky: See-saw
Gusztáv Kecskés: The French popular press and the 1956 Hungarian Revolution
László Eörsi: The Hungarian National Committee in Budapest’s Second District
Csaba Békés: Why wasn’t there a second cold war in Europe? The Hungarian party leadership and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. Documents
Report on the activity of the 1956 Institute in 2002
Publications by members of staff in 2002–3
Bibliography of the 1956 Revolution