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Additional Physical Format: | Online version: Multiple populisms New York : Routledge, 2019. (DLC) 2019027913 |
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Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Paul Blokker; Manuel Anselmi |
ISBN: | 9780815361718 0815361718 |
OCLC Number: | 1099888477 |
Description: | xvii, 251 pages ; 25 cm |
Contents: | Introduction : multiple populisms : Italy as democracy's mirror / Paul Blokker and Manuel Anselmi -- The construction of the people / Valentina Pazé -- Neo-populism and the subversion of democratic quality / Leonardo Morlino and Francesco Raniolo -- Depoliticization, anti-politics and the moral people / Fabio De Nardis -- Anti-party-ism as a structural component of Italian democracy / Nadia Urbinati -- "Particracy" : the pre-populist critique of party democracy, and its implications / David Ragazzoni -- Populist anti-party parties / Lorenzo Viviani -- Technopopulism and direct representation / Michele Sorice and Emiliana De Blasio -- Intellectuals and cultural populism / Massimiliano Panarari -- Penal populism in the multi-populist context of Italy / Manuel Anselmi and Stefano Anastasìa -- Citizen democracy : "new politics" in "new participation" models information classification / Marco Damiani -- The populist assault on the constitution / Paul Blokker -- Four Italian populisms / Cecilia Biancalana -- Conclusions : the Italian populist challenge in comparative perspective / Oscar Mazzoleni. |
Responsibility: | edited by Paul Blokker and Manuel Anselmi. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
"Contemporary nationalist populism is rich in paradox. Deeply rooted in and protective of individual cultures and histories, its movements share many characteristics across countries. They are highly political, but depend on an anti-political rhetoric. Paul Blokker and Manuel Anselmi's collection confronts this complexity through the lens of a key case: Italy. Currently governed by two rival populist parties, Italy has a long record of populist movements and ideas. Again, however, as several of these authors clearly show, this is not a question of a national peculiarity, but a strong example of a phenomenon to be found far more widely." - Colin Crouch, Professor Emeritus, University of Warwick, external scientific member, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne, Germany. "This book fills a vacuum in the literature on contemporary populist regimes. These appeared first in Latin America in the mid-XXth Century, and their emergence, as well as the appearance of movements and parties with populist orientations is now reshaping contemporary politics in Europe and the United States. Globalization and the technological revolution are restructuring these countries' social structure and upending their political culture. More and more, the conflict between globalists and nationalists or populists is becoming the central political cleavage in industrial countries. The essays in this volume represent the most comprehensive analysis of the sources, mechanisms and consequences of populism in Italy, the paradigmatic case of the populist shift in consolidated democracies. They show the multiple ways, explicit and latent, in which in which populism in civil society, the parties, and now the government, in this country paradoxically governed by a coalition of a right-wing and a left-wing populist parties, is eroding and re-defining political and cultural institutions. Beyond Italy, their discussion of the impact of populism on the party system, the quality of democracy, and the cultural sphere is highly relevant for the understanding of the populist challenge to liberal democracy in other parts of the world. The question is whether Italy is pointing the way that will be followed by many other societies in the near future. For all these reasons, this book will become a central reference for the study of comparative populism. I give it my strong endorsement." - Carlos H. Waisman, Emeritus Professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, San Diego, USA."Populism became a convenient scapegoat explaining liberal flaws. This book proposes a more sophisticated understanding of this phenomenon. Rather than seeing it as a mysterious and poisonous political virus, populism is discussed as a multi-faceted condition, which involves the redefinition of some of the essential characteristics of democracy, such as participation, representation, and political conflict. Populism is a response to the erosion of liberal democracy and to the pathologies of neo-liberal economics. The Italian case shows that this response is legitimate, but probably misguided. Students of democracy in Europe and beyond should read this thought-provoking and timely collection of essays." - Jan Zielonka, Professor of European Politics at the University of Oxford, UK. Read more...

