26th Central European Political Science Association (2-3 June 2022, Bled, Slovenia)

Panel: Political Potential of Conspiracy Theories in CEE

Chairs:  Agnieszka Turska-Kawa (University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland), Miro Haček (University of Ljubljana)

  • Agnieszka Turska-Kawa (University of Silesia, Poland): Psychological profiles of supporters of conspiracy theories
  • Ladislav Cabada (Metropolitan University Prague, Czech Republic): Czech political discourse and the conspiracy theories
  • Paweł Matuszewski (Collegium Civitas, Poland): How to detect a conspiracy theory? A semi-supervised method to discover vague and quickly evolving phenomena from the Internet
  • Peter Csanyi (University of Economics in Bratislava, Slovakia): The Impact of Conspiracy Theories on Slovak Public Space
  • Martin Laryš (Institute of International Relations Prague, Czech Republic): Anti-Covid Restrictions as a New Window of Opportunity for the Far-Right in Central Europe
  • Ondřej Filipec (University of Ss. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava) Slovakia Reflection of Covid-19 Pandemics in Disinformation Chain Emails: The Case of the Czech Republic
  • Miro Haček (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia): Conspiracy theories in the wake of Slovenian super election year of 2022

Other papers:

  • Barbara Bieniek (University of Silesia, Poland) and Justyna Lipka (University of Silesia, Poland): The political componenet of conspiracy theories
  • Natalia Galica (University of Silesia, Poland) and Michał Rams-Ługowski (University of Silesia, Poland):  The communication component of conspiracy theories/Social media analysis
  • Paulina Wardawy (University of Silesia, Poland):  The psychological component of conspiracy theories
Skip to content