Fields of Power Podcast Por Ian M. Cook Péter József Bori Noémi Gonda arte de portada

Fields of Power

Fields of Power

De: Ian M. Cook Péter József Bori Noémi Gonda
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"Fields of Power" is a serial podcast that tells the story of how control over land in Hungary became a crucial terrain for consolidating PM Orbán's regime's authoritarian grip on power. At the heart of "Fields of Power" is a central question: how does land ownership shape democracy? Or even more urgently: how does the loss of democratic control over land support the rise of illiberalism? The story begins on the farms and grazing areas, in displaced rural communities, and through the voices of those directly affected. In the podcast, we hear from farmers and herders who lost their land, an investigative journalist who has spent years unpacking these dynamics, activists and "alternative" farmers who resist the system from within, and scholars who help us make sense of what this all means for the rise of far-right authoritarianism today. Our podcast strives to challenge the common view that Viktor Orbán is the main problem in Hungary. Our aim is to show that Orbánism did not arise in a vacuum. Rather, it is deeply entangled with, environmental and agricultural transformations, including the privatisation and enclosure of farmland, the "urgency" of the green transition, technocracy, the destruction of commons, and the erosion of local democratic institutions. The podcast was created and produced by three academics working on environmental justice, political ecology, and far-right authoritarianism in Central-Eastern Europe.2025 Ciencia Ciencias Sociales
Episodios
  • Episode 2: The Land Grab Chronicles
    Dec 1 2025

    Episode 2 of Fields of Power moves from the aisles of a Hungarian supermarket into the hidden machinery of a political-economic system where land, food, and power are tightly intertwined. Péter and Ian begin by tracing the products of powerful political-economic elites Hungary's oligarchs whose companies dominate everything from dairy to wine. But the question they pursue is bigger: how did land become the key to their power, and why does it matter for Hungary's future?

    Episode 2: The Land Grab Chronicles

    The episode shows how these elites used state-engineered land auctions to accumulate vast tracts of farmland, a process made highly profitable by EU subsidies that reward ownership rather than cultivation. Drawing on the investigations of former state secretary József Ángyán, it reveals how fields intended for family farmers were channelled instead to regime loyalists.

    What emerges is more than a story about property: it's about how land grabbing undermines democracy, weakens food sovereignty, blocks climate-resilient farming, and shapes the future of Hungary and Hungarians.

    Más Menos
    32 m
  • Episode 1: Of Farms & Fortune
    Nov 11 2025

    What looks like a dispute over farmland turns out to be something much larger. Episode 1 of Fields of Power begins with the story of Kishantos, an organic farm south of Budapest and opens into a wider investigation of land grabbing, power, and the rise of authoritarian politics in Hungary.

    Episode 1: Farms & Fortune

    Fields of Power begins at Kishantos, a once-celebrated organic demonstration farm and folk school in rural Hungary. In this episode, we follow the story of Éva Ácsné, who spent decades building a model of ecological farming, education, and community, only to see the land seized and crops destroyed after a government land tender handed the fields to politically connected newcomers.

    Through Éva's experience, we open up a bigger story: how the privatisation of state-owned agricultural land in the 2010s helped consolidate authoritarian power around Hungary's ruling elite. We hear how land – once imagined as the basis of sustainable livelihoods and local democracy – became a tool for wealth accumulation, patronage, and political control.

    Alongside Éva's testimony, investigative journalist Gabriella Horn helps us trace how Hungary's farmland moved from state cooperatives to private hands, and how EU agricultural subsidies made land ownership itself extraordinarily profitable – even without farming it.

    What happened in Kishantos is not just a local tragedy. It reveals how struggles over land use and ownership matter for democracy, and how democracy can literally erode from the ground up.

    This episode sets the stage for the series' central questions:

    What happens when control over the land shifts away from communities? And how does this loss help fuel the rise of illiberal, right-wing and authoritarian politics?

    Más Menos
    33 m
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