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Technocratic appeals to expertise and populist invocations of 'the
people' have become mainstays of political competition in
established democracies. This development is best understood as the
emergence of technopopulism-a new political logic that is being
superimposed on the traditional struggle between left and right.
Political movements and actors-such as Italy's Five Star Movement
and France's La Republiqe En Marche-combine technocratic and
populist appeals in a variety of ways, as do more established
parties that are adapting to the particular set of incentives and
constraints implicit in this new, unmediated form of politics. In
the first book-length treatment of the phenomenon of
technopopulism, we combine theoretical and historical approaches,
offering a systematic definition of the concept of technopopulism,
while also exploring a number of salient contemporary examples.
This book provides a detailed account of the emergence of this new
political logic, as well as a discussion of its troubling
consequences for existing democratic regimes. It ends by
considering some possible remedies that go beyond the simplistic
idea that in the right 'dose' populism and technocracy can
counter-balance one another.
The twenty years since the signing of the Maastricht Treaty have
been marked by an integration paradox: although the scope of
European Union (EU) activity has increased at an unprecedented
pace, this increase has largely taken place in the absence of
significant new transfers of power to supranational institutions
along traditional lines. Conventional theories of European
integration struggle to explain this paradox because they equate
integration with the empowerment of specific supranational
institutions under the traditional Community method. New governance
scholars, meanwhile, have not filled this intellectual void,
preferring instead to focus on specific deviations from the
Community method rather than theorizing about the evolving nature
of the European project. The New Intergovernmentalism challenges
established assumptions about how member states behave, what
supranational institutions want, and where the dividing line
between high and low politics is located, and develops a new
theoretical framework known as the new intergovernmentalism. The
fifteen chapters in this volume by leading political scientists,
political economists, and legal scholars explore the scope and
limits of the new intergovernmentalism as a theory of
post-Maastricht integration and draw conclusions about the profound
state of political disequilibrium in which the EU operates. This
book is of relevance to EU specialists seeking new ways of thinking
about European integration and policy-making, and general readers
who wish to understand what has happened to the EU in the two
troubled decades since 1992.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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