Péter Krekó
Appearance
(Redirected from Péter Krekó (political science))
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Péter Krekó | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Hungarian |
Citizenship | Hungarian |
Academic career | |
Field | Political science |
Péter Krekó (born 20 March 1980) is a Hungarian economist, political psychologist, political scientist, and professor. He currently serves as the Director of the Political Capital Institute, and as a senior external researcher for the Center for European Policy Analysis.
Early life and career
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (May 2022) |
Krekó was born on 20 March 1980 to Béla Krekó Jr. and Ildikó Kupa. His grandfather Béla Krekó was a mathematical economist. Currently, Péter Krekó is the supervisor of the Doctoral School of Psychology at Eötvös Loránd University. His areas of research include: conspiracy theories, fake, political populism and extremism, Russian soft power influence, and intergroup conflicts.
Notable works
[edit]- Web of Science has published 10 studies. h-index 4. Average citations per item 7. Number of independent citations 68.[1]
- Péter Krekó. 32 Publications, 12,289 Reads, 245 Citations.[2]
- Faragó Laura-Ferenczy-Nyúl Dávid- Kende-Anna-Krekó Péter-Gurály, Zoltán: Criminalization as a justification for violence against the homeless in Hungary. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY 161 Paper: OnlineFirst. 15 p. (2021) [3]
- Kende-Anna-Krekó Péter: Xenophobia, prejudice, and right-wing populism in East-Central Europe. CURRENT OPINION IN BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES 34 pp. 29–33. 5 p. (2020)
- Countering conspiracy theories and misinformation. In: Butter, M; Knight, P (szerk.) Routledge Handbook of Conspiracy Theories. Abingdon, Egyesült Királyság / Anglia : Routledge, (2020) p.[4]
- Faragó-Laura-Kende, Anna-Krekó, Péter: We only Believe in News that We Doctored Ourselves: The Connection between Partisanship and Political Fake News. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY 51. 2 pp. 77–90. 14 p. (2020)[5]
- Russia in Hungarian public opinion. In: Tóth István György (szerk.) Hungarian Social Report 2019.Budapest, Magyarország. Tárki Társadalomkutatási Intézet Zrt., (2019) pp. 358–371. 16 p.[6]
- Krekó Péter-Molnár Csaba-Rácz András: Mystification and demystification of Putin’s Russia: Research summary: 26 p. (2019) Budapest. Political Capital Policy Research and Consulting Institute Kiadó.[7]
- Faragó Laura-Kende, Anna-Krekó Péter: Justification of intergroup violence – the role of right-wing authoritarianism and propensity for radical action. DYNAMICS OF ASYMMETRIC CONFLICT: PATHWAYS TOWARD TERRORISM AND GENOCIDE 12. 2 pp. 113–128. 16 p. (2019)[8]
- The relationship between populist attitudes and support for political violence in Hungary and Poland. Paper. (2018) [9]
- Mass Paranoia: The Social Psychology of Conspiracy Theories and False News. (in Hungarian); Budapest, Magyarország, Athenaeum Kiadó (2018), 350 p.
- Péter Krekó-Attila, Juhász: The Hungarian Far Right: Social Demand, Political Supply, and International Context. Stuttgart, Németország. Ibidem-Verlag (2017) 260 p.
- Conspiracy Theory as Collective Motivated Cognition. In: Bilewicz, M; Cichocka, A; Soral, W (szerk.) The Psychology of Conspiracy. London, Egyesült Királyság. Routledge. (2015) pp. 62–75., 8 p.
References
[edit]- ^ Krekó Péter Web of Science 2021-04-03
- ^ "Profile: Peter Kreko". ResearchGate.
- ^ Faragó, Laura; Ferenczy-Nyúl, Dávid; Kende, Anna; Krekó, Péter; Gurály, Zoltán (January 20, 2021). "Criminalization as a justification for violence against the homeless in Hungary". The Journal of Social Psychology. 162 (2): 216–230. doi:10.1080/00224545.2021.1874257. PMID 33470185. S2CID 231653347 – via Taylor and Francis+NEJM.
- ^ Butter, Michael; Knight, Peter, eds. (2020). Routledge Handbook of Conspiracy Theories. Taylor & Francis. doi:10.4324/9780429452734. ISBN 9780429452734. S2CID 219132481. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
- ^ "Faragó-Laura-Kende, Anna-Krekó, Péter: We only Believe in News that We Doctored Ourselves: The Connection between Partisanship and Political Fake News".
- ^ "Krekó Péter: Russia in Hungarian public opinion" (PDF).
- ^ Krekó Péter-Molnár Csaba-Rácz András: Mystification and demystification of Putin’s Russia
- ^ Faragó, Laura; Kende, Anna; Krekó, Péter (May 4, 2019). "Justification of intergroup violence – the role of right-wing authoritarianism and propensity for radical action". Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict. 12 (2): 113–128. doi:10.1080/17467586.2019.1576916. hdl:10831/46381.
- ^ "Krekó Péter: The relationship between populist attitudes and support for political violence in Hungary and Poland" (PDF).