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Introduction - The (non)resilience of the Hungarian Legal System: From Populist Constitutionalism to a Permanent State of Danger. Part I Public Law and Resilience -- Assessing Constitutional Resilience: The Performance of the 2011 Fundamental Law in Fulfilling Constitutional Functions -- 'Eliminating Conservation'? Re-Regulation of the Hungarian Administrative Procedure in the Act on General Administrative Procedure -- Minority Rights, Minority Protection, and Diaspora Policy in Hungary, 2010-2018 -- Changes in the Legal Status of 'Churches' in Hungary after 2010 -- Part II Criminal Law, Private Law, Regulation and Resilience -- Reflections on the Responsiveness in Hungary of the Legal System - from a Criminal Law Perspective -- Adaptation Mechanisms in Private Law -- Economic and Social Crises, Model Change and the Responsiveness of the Legal System: Special Tax Measures and their Regulation in Hungary -- Risks and Resilience in the European Union's Regulation of Online Platforms and Artificial Intelligence - Hungary in Digital Europe -- Part III Courts and Resilience -- The Resilience of the Hungarian Court System between 2012 and 2020 -- 'The Past is Unforgettable': Civil Procedural Law's Response to the Challenges of Pseudo-Modern Society and Economy in Hungary after 2010 -- Part IV Different Theoretical Approaches to Resilience -- Change of Law: Backgrounds and Limits, Expectations and Realizations -- Resilience Thinking - Emergence, Conceptualisations, and Applicability in Social Systems and Law -- A Pluralistic Model of the Responsiveness of Law: The Case of Hungary. |