@article{a2fea90907374e6e94d56b9fc81cff4d,
title = "Interview with Prof. Jan Kubik: The FATIGUE project",
author = "Jan Kubik",
note = "Funding Information: Some time ago there was a call for proposals from Marie Sk{\l}odowska-Curie programme within the European grant scheme, Horizon 2020. I don{\textquoteright}t remember exactly how it started, but I know that Dr. Richard Mole and I began talking about it, particularly deadlines. The FATIGUE Project is a scheme that allows you to train doctoral students for three years. They are called early career researchers, receiving full funding for three years, but they need to be enrolled in a doctoral programme. The whole thing spans for four years, as we have some time for preparation at the beginning and some time for wrapping up at the end. The full title: Delayed transformational fatigue in Central and Eastern Europe responding to the rise of right-wing populism. This was my idea, based on something I wrote, so I provided the main narrative. I had this concept that there is something really interesting going on – in the 90s Central and Eastern Europe was in a worse shape than it is today, yet there was no populism, while twenty some years later, these countries are in better shape, certainly Poland, and there is right-wing populism. This is a big puzzle, something rather hard to explain, hence the concept of delay becomes central. Then I came to the use of this word - fatigue. Richard contributed onlalron tsf,rofmas otpiredpariegnhtemassiveadministrativeaprtfohtepaplication.",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.14324/111.0954-6839.071",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "30",
pages = "14--20",
journal = "Slovo",
issn = "0954-6839",
publisher = "University College London - School of Slavonic and East European Studies",
}