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Today, there is no comparable threat to Western democracies as the
rise of right-wing populism. While it has played an increasing role
at least since the 1990s, only the social consequences of the
global financial crises in 2008 have given its break that led to
UK's 'Brexit' and the election of Donald Trump as US President in
2016 but also promoted what has been called left populism in
countries that were hit the hardest from both the banking crisis
and consequential neo-liberal austerity politics in the EU like
Greece and Portugal. In 2017, the French Front National (FN)
attracted many voters in the French Presidential elections; we have
seen the radicalization of the Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) in
Germany and the formation of centre-right government in Austria.
Further, we have witnessed the consolidation of autocratic regimes
as in the EU member states Poland and Greece. All these
manifestations of right-wing populism share a common feature: they
attack or even compromise the core elements of democratic societies
such as the separation of powers, protection of minorities, or the
rule of law. Despite a broad debate on the re-emergence of
'populism' in the transition from the twentieth to the twenty-first
century that has brought forth many interesting findings, a lack of
sociological reasoning cannot be denied as sociology itself
withdrew from theorising populism decades ago and left the field to
mainly political sciences and history. In a sense, Populism and the
Crisis of Democracy considers itself as a contribution to start
with filling this lacuna. Written in a direct and clear style, this
set of volumes will be an invaluable reference for students and
scholars in the field of political theory, political sociology and
European Studies.
This book addresses the manifold crisis of current societies and
understands it as a failure of normative social structuration. As
an exemplar for this development, it analyses the decline of
welfare state models and the corresponding societal compromise.
Yet, it evaluates them as a symptom of a wider malaise of normative
orders in complex societies. The question thus arises as to how
social science can study the ongoing societal transformation. The
book frames the phenomenon as 'normative intermittency' to capture
its fluid alternation of social structuration and destructuration
and develops its analysis in three steps: first, it draws a
theoretically reflected symptomatic of its occurrences; it then
establishes the sociological diagnosis necessary to understand its
unfolding and finally evaluates its political outcomes.
Methodologically, the book advocates a complete overhaul of the
analytical frames of sociology to gauge the intermittent rhythm of
the ongoing societal transformation. Thus, it develops an
innovative reading of classical sociological theory beyond a number
of unreflected axiomatic assumptions of the current sociological
mainstream. Thanks to the assessment of the political outcomes of
failing social structuration the book turns to a discussion of the
development of possible emancipation paths in the form of
'transformative social action'; reflexively, this accounts for the
results of the sociological diagnosis of the crisis of normative
social orders. The main analyses within the book scrutinise a
number of empirical phenomena that establish normative
intermittency in current societies and refer to the major debates
that are taking place on the related topics in the state of art of
sociological and political theory.
The Routledge International Handbook of Simmel Studies documents
the richness, variety, and creativity of contemporary international
research on Georg Simmel's work. Starting with the established role
of Simmel as a classical author of sociology, and including the
growing interest in his work in the domain of philosophy, this
volume explores the research on Simmel in several further
disciplines including art, social aesthetics, literature, theatre,
essayism, and critical theory, as well as in the debates on
cosmopolitanism, economic pathologies of life, freedom, modernity,
religion, and nationalism. Bringing together contributions from
leading specialists in research on Simmel, the book is thematically
arranged in order to highlight the relevance of his oeuvre for
different fields of recent research, with a further section tracing
the most important paths that Simmel's reception has taken in the
world. As such, it will appeal to scholars across the social
sciences and humanities, and to sociologists, philosophers, and
social theorists in particular, with interest in Simmel's thought.
Urban Change and Citizenship in Times of Crisis addresses the fact
that in the beginning of the twenty-first century the majority of
the world's population is urbanised, a social fact that has turned
cities more than ever into focal sites of social change. Multiple
economic and political strategies, employed by a variety of
individual and collective actors, on a number of scales, constitute
cities as contested spaces that hold opportunities as well as
restrictions for their inhabitants. While cities and urban spaces
have long been of central concern for the social sciences, today,
classical sociological questions about the city acquire new
meaning: Can cities be spaces of emancipation, or does life in the
modern city entail a corrosion of citizenship rights? Is the city
the focus of societal transformation processes, or do urban
environments lose importance in shaping social reality and economic
relationships? Furthermore, new questions urgently need to be
asked: What is the impact of different historical phenomena such as
neo-liberal restructuring, financial and economic crises, or
migration flows, as well as their respective counter-movements, on
the structure of contemporary cities and on the citizenship rights
of city inhabitants? The three volumes address such crucial
questions thereby opening up new spaces of debate on both the city
and new developments of urbanism. The contributions to Theories and
Concepts offer new theoretical reflections on the city in a
philosophical and historical perspective as well as fresh empirical
analyses of social life in urban contexts. Chapters not only
critically revisit classical and modern philosophical
considerations about the nature of cities but no less discuss
normative philosophical reflections of urban life and the role of
religion in historical processes of the emergence of cities.
Composed around the question whether there can be such a thing as a
'successful city', this volume addresses issues of urban political
subjectivities by considering the city's role in historical
processes of emancipation, the fight for citizenship rights, and
today's challenges and opportunities with regard to promoting
social justice, integration, and diversity. Consequentially,
theory-driven empirical analyses offer new insight into ways of
solving problems in urban contexts and a genuine approach to
analyse the Social Quality in cities.
The contributions to Urban neo- liberalisation bring together
critical analyses of the dynamics and processes neo- liberalism has
facilitated in urban contexts. Recent developments, such as
intensified economic investment and exposure to aggressive
strategies of banks, hedge- funds and investors, and long- term
processes of market- and state- led urban restructuration, have
produced uneven urban geographies and new forms of exclusion and
marginality. These strategies have no less transformed the
governance of cities by subordinating urban social life to
rationalities and practices of competition within and between
cities, and they also heavily impact on city inhabitants'
experience of everyday life. Against the backdrop of recent
austerity politics and a marketisation of cities, this volume
discusses processes of urban neo- liberalisation with regard to
democracy and citizenship, inclusion and exclusion, opportunities,
and life- chances. It addresses pressing issues of commodification
of housing and home, activation of civil society, vulnerability,
and the right to the city.
At times of triumphant neo-liberalism cities increasingly become
objects of financial speculation. Formally, social and political
rights might not be abolished, yet factually they have become
inaccessible for large parts of the population. The contributions
gathered in this volume shed light on the clash between the
perspectives of restructuring and reordering urban environments in
the interest of investors and the manifold and innovative agencies
of resistance that claim and stand up for the rights of urban
citizenship. Renewed waves of urban transformation employ state
coercion to foster the expulsion of poor and marginalised
inhabitants from those urban spaces that attract interest from
speculators. The intervention of state agencies triggers the work
of hegemonic culture for reframing the housing issue and
implementing moral and political legitimation, as well as
legislation that restricts urban citizenship rights. The case
studies of the volume comparatively show the different and
sometimes contradictory patterns of these conflicts in Berlin,
Sydney, Belfast, Jerusalem, Amsterdam, and Istanbul as well as in
metropoles of Latin America and China. Innovative resistance
agencies emerge that paint possible paths for the re-establishment
of the right to the city as the core of urban citizenship.
The Routledge International Handbook of Simmel Studies documents
the richness, variety, and creativity of contemporary international
research on Georg Simmel's work. Starting with the established role
of Simmel as a classical author of sociology, and including the
growing interest in his work in the domain of philosophy, this
volume explores the research on Simmel in several further
disciplines including art, social aesthetics, literature, theatre,
essayism, and critical theory, as well as in the debates on
cosmopolitanism, economic pathologies of life, freedom, modernity,
religion, and nationalism. Bringing together contributions from
leading specialists in research on Simmel, the book is thematically
arranged in order to highlight the relevance of his oeuvre for
different fields of recent research, with a further section tracing
the most important paths that Simmel's reception has taken in the
world. As such, it will appeal to scholars across the social
sciences and humanities, and to sociologists, philosophers, and
social theorists in particular, with interest in Simmel's thought.
There is no threat to Western democracies today comparable to the
rise of right-wing populism. While it has played an increasing role
at least since the 1990s, only the social consequences of the
global financial crises in 2008 have given it its break that led to
UK's 'Brexit' and the election of Donald Trump as US President in
2016, as well as promoting what has been called left populism in
countries that were hit the hardest by both the banking crisis and
consequential neo-liberal austerity politics in the EU, such as
Greece and Portugal. In 2017, the French Front National (FN)
attracted many voters in the French Presidential elections; we have
seen the radicalization of the Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) in
Germany and the formation of centre-right government in Austria.
Further, we have witnessed the consolidation of autocratic regimes,
as in the EU member states Poland and Greece. All these
manifestations of right-wing populism share a common feature: they
attack or even compromise the core elements of democratic societies
such as the separation of powers, protection of minorities, or the
rule of law. Despite a broad debate on the re-emergence of
'populism' in the transition from the twentieth to the twenty-first
century that has brought forth many interesting findings, a lack of
sociological reasoning cannot be denied, as sociology itself
withdrew from theorising populism decades ago and largely left the
field to political sciences and history. In a sense, Populism and
the Crisis of Democracy considers itself a contribution to begin
filling this lacuna. Written in a direct and clear style, this set
of volumes will be an invaluable reference for students and
scholars in the field of political theory, political sociology and
European Studies. This volume Concepts and Theory offers new and
fresh perspectives on the debate on populism. Starting from
complaints about the problems of conceptualising populism that in
recent years have begun to revolve around themselves, the chapters
offer a fundamental critique of the term and concept of populism,
theoretically inspired typologies and descriptions of currently
dominant concepts, and ways to elaborate on them. With regard to
theory, the volume offers approaches that exceed the disciplinary
horizon of political science that so far has dominated the debate.
As sociological theory so far has been more or less absent in the
debate on populism, only few efforts have been made to discuss
populism more intensely within different theoretical contexts in
order to explain its dynamics and processes. Thus, this volume
offers critical views on the debate on populism from the
perspectives of political economy and the analysis of critical
historical events, the links of analyses of populism with social
movement mobilisation, the significance of 'superfluous
populations' in the rise of populism and an analysis of the
exclusionary character of populism from the perspective of the
theory of social closure.
The contributions to this volume Migration, Gender and Religion
bring together empirically grounded and theoretically sophisticated
case studies of populist responses to what are perceived to be the
threats to national survival and sovereignty from
‘uncontrolled’ immigration. The demographic context –
declining fertility rates and ageing populations – promotes the
belief that high Muslim fertility rates are material evidence of an
Islamic threat to the West, to national cohesion and particularly
to the safety and dignity of the women of the host community.
Consequently, gender plays an important part in populist ideology,
but populist attitudes to gender are often contradictory. Populist
movements are often marked by misogyny and by policies that are
typically anti-feminist in rejecting gender equality. The
traditional family with a dominant father and submissive mother is
promoted as the basis of national values and the remedy against
social decline. The obsession with women in the public domain
points to a crisis of masculinity associated with unemployment, the
impact of austerity packages on social status, and the growth of
pink collar employment. Inevitably, religion is drawn into these
political debates about the future of Western societies, because
religion in general has seen the family and mothers as essential
for the reproduction of religion. Christendom has been identified
by populists as providing the ultimate defence of the borders of
European civilisation against Islam, despite the fact that church
leaders have often defended and welcomed outsiders in terms of
Christian charity. Once more Christian Europe is the Abendland
standing in defiance of a threatening and subversive Morgenland.
This volume will be an invaluable reference for students and
scholars in the field of political theory, political sociology and
European Studies.
The complete collected works of Georg Simmel are now available.
Yet, the standing of Simmel's sociological theory is still a
subject of controversy. Is Simmel only a brilliant impressionist, a
flaneur in the territories of modernity? Providing an illuminating
and coherent presentation of Simmel's sociological theory, The
Challenge of Modernity seeks to demonstrate how Simmel contributed
a structured sociological theory that fits the criteria of a
'sociological grand theory'. Indeed, starting by the theory of
modernity and its dimensions of social differentiation,
monetarisation, culture reification and urbanisation; it
reconstructs the architecture of Simmel's sociological
epistemology. Particular attention is dedicated to the theory of
'qualitative societal differentiation' that Simmel develops within
his cultural sociology, with the late work being presented as a
double contribution to the foundation of sociological anthropology
and to the social ethics of complex societies. Presenting the
entirety of Simmel's manifold oeuvre from the viewpoint of its
relevance for sociology, this comprehensive volume will appeal to
scholars and advanced students who wish to understand Simmel's
relevance for socio-political thought and become acquainted with
his contribution to sociological theory. It will also be of
interest to the wider public who seek a critical assessment of our
age in theoretical terms.
The contributions to this volume Politics, Social Movements and
Extremism take serious the fact that populism is a symptom of the
crisis of representation that is affecting parliamentary democracy.
Right-wing populism skyrocketed to electoral success and is now
part of the government in several European countries, but it also
shaped the Brexit campaign and the US presidential election. In
Southern Europe, left-wing populism transformed the classical two
parties systems into ungovernable three fractions parliaments,
whereas in Latin America it still presents an instable alternative
to liberal democracy. The varying consequences of populist
mobilisation so far consist in the maceration of the established
borders of political culture, the distortion of legislation
concerning migrants and migration, and the emergence of hybrid
regimes bordering on and sometimes leaning towards dictatorship.
Yet, in order to understand populism, innovative research
approaches are required that need to be capable of overcoming
stereotypes and conceptual dichotomies which are deeply rooted in
the political debate. The chapters of this volume offer such new
theoretical strategies for inquiring into the multi-faceted
populist phenomenon. The chapters analyse its language, concepts
and its relationship to social media in an innovative way, draw the
con - tours of left- and right-wing populism and reconstruct its
shifting delimitation to political extremism. Furthermore, they
value the most significant aftermath of populist mobilisation on
the institutional frame of parliamentary democracy from the
limitation of the freedom of press, to the dismantling of the
separation of powers, to the erosion of citizenship rights. This
volume will be an invaluable reference for students and scholars in
the field of political theory, political sociology and European
Studies.
This book addresses the manifold crisis of current societies and
understands it as a failure of normative social structuration. As
an exemplar for this development, it analyses the decline of
welfare state models and the corresponding societal compromise.
Yet, it evaluates them as a symptom of a wider malaise of normative
orders in complex societies. The question thus arises as to how
social science can study the ongoing societal transformation. The
book frames the phenomenon as ‘normative intermittency’ to
capture its fluid alternation of social structuration and
destructuration and develops its analysis in three steps: first, it
draws a theoretically reflected symptomatic of its occurrences; it
then establishes the sociological diagnosis necessary to understand
its unfolding and finally evaluates its political outcomes.
Methodologically, the book advocates a complete overhaul of the
analytical frames of sociology to gauge the intermittent rhythm of
the ongoing societal transformation. Thus, it develops an
innovative reading of classical sociological theory beyond a number
of unreflected axiomatic assumptions of the current sociological
mainstream. Thanks to the assessment of the political outcomes of
failing social structuration the book turns to a discussion of the
development of possible emancipation paths in the form of
‘transformative social action’; reflexively, this accounts for
the results of the sociological diagnosis of the crisis of
normative social orders. The main analyses within the book
scrutinise a number of empirical phenomena that establish normative
intermittency in current societies and refer to the major debates
that are taking place on the related topics in the state of art of
sociological and political theory.
There is no threat to Western democracies today comparable to the
rise of right-wing populism. While it has played an increasing role
at least since the 1990s, only the social consequences of the
global financial crises in 2008 have given it its break that led to
UK's 'Brexit' and the election of Donald Trump as US President in
2016, as well as promoting what has been called left populism in
countries that were hit the hardest by both the banking crisis and
consequential neo-liberal austerity politics in the EU, such as
Greece and Portugal. In 2017, the French Front National (FN)
attracted many voters in the French Presidential elections; we have
seen the radicalization of the Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) in
Germany and the formation of centre-right government in Austria.
Further, we have witnessed the consolidation of autocratic regimes,
as in the EU member states Poland and Greece. All these
manifestations of right-wing populism share a common feature: they
attack or even compromise the core elements of democratic societies
such as the separation of powers, protection of minorities, or the
rule of law. Despite a broad debate on the re-emergence of
'populism' in the transition from the twentieth to the twenty-first
century that has brought forth many interesting findings, a lack of
sociological reasoning cannot be denied, as sociology itself
withdrew from theorising populism decades ago and largely left the
field to political sciences and history. In a sense, Populism and
the Crisis of Democracy considers itself a contribution to begin
filling this lacuna. Written in a direct and clear style, this set
of volumes will be an invaluable reference for students and
scholars in the field of political theory, political sociology and
European Studies. This volume Concepts and Theory offers new and
fresh perspectives on the debate on populism. Starting from
complaints about the problems of conceptualising populism that in
recent years have begun to revolve around themselves, the chapters
offer a fundamental critique of the term and concept of populism,
theoretically inspired typologies and descriptions of currently
dominant concepts, and ways to elaborate on them. With regard to
theory, the volume offers approaches that exceed the disciplinary
horizon of political science that so far has dominated the debate.
As sociological theory so far has been more or less absent in the
debate on populism, only few efforts have been made to discuss
populism more intensely within different theoretical contexts in
order to explain its dynamics and processes. Thus, this volume
offers critical views on the debate on populism from the
perspectives of political economy and the analysis of critical
historical events, the links of analyses of populism with social
movement mobilisation, the significance of 'superfluous
populations' in the rise of populism and an analysis of the
exclusionary character of populism from the perspective of the
theory of social closure.
The contributions to this volume Politics, Social Movements and
Extremism take serious the fact that populism is a symptom of the
crisis of representation that is affecting parliamentary democracy.
Right-wing populism skyrocketed to electoral success and is now
part of the government in several European countries, but it also
shaped the Brexit campaign and the US presidential election. In
Southern Europe, left-wing populism transformed the classical two
parties systems into ungovernable three fractions parliaments,
whereas in Latin America it still presents an instable alternative
to liberal democracy. The varying consequences of populist
mobilisation so far consist in the maceration of the established
borders of political culture, the distortion of legislation
concerning migrants and migration, and the emergence of hybrid
regimes bordering on and sometimes leaning towards dictatorship.
Yet, in order to understand populism, innovative research
approaches are required that need to be capable of overcoming
stereotypes and conceptual dichotomies which are deeply rooted in
the political debate. The chapters of this volume offer such new
theoretical strategies for inquiring into the multi-faceted
populist phenomenon. The chapters analyse its language, concepts
and its relationship to social media in an innovative way, draw the
con - tours of left- and right-wing populism and reconstruct its
shifting delimitation to political extremism. Furthermore, they
value the most significant aftermath of populist mobilisation on
the institutional frame of parliamentary democracy from the
limitation of the freedom of press, to the dismantling of the
separation of powers, to the erosion of citizenship rights. This
volume will be an invaluable reference for students and scholars in
the field of political theory, political sociology and European
Studies.
The contributions to this volume Migration, Gender and Religion
bring together empirically grounded and theoretically sophisticated
case studies of populist responses to what are perceived to be the
threats to national survival and sovereignty from 'uncontrolled'
immigration. The demographic context - declining fertility rates
and ageing populations - promotes the belief that high Muslim
fertility rates are material evidence of an Islamic threat to the
West, to national cohesion and particularly to the safety and
dignity of the women of the host community. Consequently, gender
plays an important part in populist ideology, but populist
attitudes to gender are often contradictory. Populist movements are
often marked by misogyny and by policies that are typically
anti-feminist in rejecting gender equality. The traditional family
with a dominant father and submissive mother is promoted as the
basis of national values and the remedy against social decline. The
obsession with women in the public domain points to a crisis of
masculinity associated with unemployment, the impact of austerity
packages on social status, and the growth of pink collar
employment. Inevitably, religion is drawn into these political
debates about the future of Western societies, because religion in
general has seen the family and mothers as essential for the
reproduction of religion. Christendom has been identified by
populists as providing the ultimate defence of the borders of
European civilisation against Islam, despite the fact that church
leaders have often defended and welcomed outsiders in terms of
Christian charity. Once more Christian Europe is the Abendland
standing in defiance of a threatening and subversive Morgenland.
This volume will be an invaluable reference for students and
scholars in the field of political theory, political sociology and
European Studies.
Urban Change and Citizenship in Times of Crisis addresses the fact
that in the beginning of the twenty-first century the majority of
the world's population is urbanised, a social fact that has turned
cities more than ever into focal sites of social change. Multiple
economic and political strategies, employed by a variety of
individual and collective actors, on a number of scales, constitute
cities as contested spaces that hold opportunities as well as
restrictions for their inhabitants. While cities and urban spaces
have long been of central concern for the social sciences, today,
classical sociological questions about the city acquire new
meaning: Can cities be spaces of emancipation, or does life in the
modern city entail a corrosion of citizenship rights? Is the city
the focus of societal transformation processes, or do urban
environments lose importance in shaping social reality and economic
relationships? Furthermore, new questions urgently need to be
asked: What is the impact of different historical phenomena such as
neo-liberal restructuring, financial and economic crises, or
migration flows, as well as their respective counter-movements, on
the structure of contemporary cities and on the citizenship rights
of city inhabitants? The three volumes address such crucial
questions thereby opening up new spaces of debate on both the city
and new developments of urbanism. The contributions to Theories and
Concepts offer new theoretical reflections on the city in a
philosophical and historical perspective as well as fresh empirical
analyses of social life in urban contexts. Chapters not only
critically revisit classical and modern philosophical
considerations about the nature of cities but no less discuss
normative philosophical reflections of urban life and the role of
religion in historical processes of the emergence of cities.
Composed around the question whether there can be such a thing as a
'successful city', this volume addresses issues of urban political
subjectivities by considering the city's role in historical
processes of emancipation, the fight for citizenship rights, and
today's challenges and opportunities with regard to promoting
social justice, integration, and diversity. Consequentially,
theory-driven empirical analyses offer new insight into ways of
solving problems in urban contexts and a genuine approach to
analyse the Social Quality in cities.
The contributions to Urban neo- liberalisation bring together
critical analyses of the dynamics and processes neo- liberalism has
facilitated in urban contexts. Recent developments, such as
intensified economic investment and exposure to aggressive
strategies of banks, hedge- funds and investors, and long- term
processes of market- and state- led urban restructuration, have
produced uneven urban geographies and new forms of exclusion and
marginality. These strategies have no less transformed the
governance of cities by subordinating urban social life to
rationalities and practices of competition within and between
cities, and they also heavily impact on city inhabitants'
experience of everyday life. Against the backdrop of recent
austerity politics and a marketisation of cities, this volume
discusses processes of urban neo- liberalisation with regard to
democracy and citizenship, inclusion and exclusion, opportunities,
and life- chances. It addresses pressing issues of commodification
of housing and home, activation of civil society, vulnerability,
and the right to the city.
The complete collected works of Georg Simmel are now available.
Yet, the standing of Simmel's sociological theory is still a
subject of controversy. Is Simmel only a brilliant impressionist, a
flaneur in the territories of modernity? Providing an illuminating
and coherent presentation of Simmel's sociological theory, The
Challenge of Modernity seeks to demonstrate how Simmel contributed
a structured sociological theory that fits the criteria of a
'sociological grand theory'. Indeed, starting by the theory of
modernity and its dimensions of social differentiation,
monetarisation, culture reification and urbanisation; it
reconstructs the architecture of Simmel's sociological
epistemology. Particular attention is dedicated to the theory of
'qualitative societal differentiation' that Simmel develops within
his cultural sociology, with the late work being presented as a
double contribution to the foundation of sociological anthropology
and to the social ethics of complex societies. Presenting the
entirety of Simmel's manifold oeuvre from the viewpoint of its
relevance for sociology, this comprehensive volume will appeal to
scholars and advanced students who wish to understand Simmel's
relevance for socio-political thought and become acquainted with
his contribution to sociological theory. It will also be of
interest to the wider public who seek a critical assessment of our
age in theoretical terms.
At times of triumphant neo-liberalism cities increasingly become
objects of financial speculation. Formally, social and political
rights might not be abolished, yet factually they have become
inaccessible for large parts of the population. The contributions
gathered in this volume shed light on the clash between the
perspectives of restructuring and reordering urban environments in
the interest of investors and the manifold and innovative agencies
of resistance that claim and stand up for the rights of urban
citizenship. Renewed waves of urban transformation employ state
coercion to foster the expulsion of poor and marginalised
inhabitants from those urban spaces that attract interest from
speculators. The intervention of state agencies triggers the work
of hegemonic culture for reframing the housing issue and
implementing moral and political legitimation, as well as
legislation that restricts urban citizenship rights. The case
studies of the volume comparatively show the different and
sometimes contradictory patterns of these conflicts in Berlin,
Sydney, Belfast, Jerusalem, Amsterdam, and Istanbul as well as in
metropoles of Latin America and China. Innovative resistance
agencies emerge that paint possible paths for the re-establishment
of the right to the city as the core of urban citizenship.
Today, there is no comparable threat to Western democracies as the
rise of right-wing populism. While it has played an increasing role
at least since the 1990s, only the social consequences of the
global financial crises in 2008 have given its break that led to
UK's 'Brexit' and the election of Donald Trump as US President in
2016 but also promoted what has been called left populism in
countries that were hit the hardest from both the banking crisis
and consequential neo-liberal austerity politics in the EU like
Greece and Portugal. In 2017, the French Front National (FN)
attracted many voters in the French Presidential elections; we have
seen the radicalization of the Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) in
Germany and the formation of centre-right government in Austria.
Further, we have witnessed the consolidation of autocratic regimes
as in the EU member states Poland and Greece. All these
manifestations of right-wing populism share a common feature: they
attack or even compromise the core elements of democratic societies
such as the separation of powers, protection of minorities, or the
rule of law. Despite a broad debate on the re-emergence of
'populism' in the transition from the twentieth to the twenty-first
century that has brought forth many interesting findings, a lack of
sociological reasoning cannot be denied as sociology itself
withdrew from theorising populism decades ago and left the field to
mainly political sciences and history. In a sense, Populism and the
Crisis of Democracy considers itself as a contribution to start
with filling this lacuna. Written in a direct and clear style, this
set of volumes will be an invaluable reference for students and
scholars in the field of political theory, political sociology and
European Studies.
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