The parish priest and the IKKA voucher - or what tree does the economic criminal create?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54231/ETSZEMLE.22.2021.3.5Abstract
In the 1960s favorable economic changes brought a noticeable rise in living standards that increasingly enabled household savings in Hungary, while at the same time, social groups were treated as enemies by party-state dictatorship, such as members of churches, who did not perceive any of the positive economic effects. This undeserving, vulnerable financial situation sometimes forced them to use coercive solutions. The study shows - through the fate of a Catholic priest- how the use of the legal economic opportunities provided by the system could be used against members of these groups.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The author(s) reserve the copyright of their work.
The Church History Review does not restrict the rights of authors to place their manuscripts or manuscript versions on preprint servers or other hosting. This applies generally to the following formats.
- Submitted version
- Accepted version (manuscript accepted by the author)
- Published version (Version of Record)