Populist movements, parties and leaders have gained influence in many countries, disrupting long-established patterns of party competition, impugning the legitimacy of representative institutions and sometimes actively weakening or coarsening government capabilities. By positing an acute contrast between the will of the people and established elites, and advocating simplistic policy solutions careless of minority rights, populists have challenged the development and even the maintenance of liberal democracy on many fronts. Social scientists’ attention to populism has grown rapidly, although it remains somewhat fragmented across disciplines. Many questions remain. Are populism’s causes economic or cultural? National or local? Is populism a threat to liberal democracy? If so, what kind of threat? And what can be done about it? Employing a range of conceptual toolkits and methods, this interdisciplinary book addresses in a critical and evidence-based way the most common diagnoses of populism’s causes, consequences and policy antidotes.
Author(s): Andrés Velasco, Irene Bucelli (eds.)
Series: LSE Public Policy Review Series
Edition: 1
Publisher: LSE Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 149
City: London
Tags: Democracy; Populism; Identity politics; Liberal democracy
Cover
Title
Copyright
LSE Public Policy Review Series
Contents
Editors
Contributors
Introduction
1. Populism and Identity Politics
2. Democracy Versus Democracy: The Populist Challenge to Liberal Democracy
3. Challenger Parties and Populism
4. The Rise of Populism and the Revenge of the Places That Don’t Matter
5. Social Media and Political Polarisation
6. The Technological Revolution, Segregation, and Populism – A Long-Term Strategic Response