| Reference : Populism [glossary] |
| E-prints/Working papers : Already available on another site | |||
| Law, criminology & political science : Political science, public administration & international relations | |||
| http://hdl.handle.net/10993/32152 | |||
| Populism [glossary] | |
| English | |
Chiocchetti, Paolo [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Language and Literature, Humanities, Arts and Education (FLSHASE) > Identités, Politiques, Sociétés, Espaces (IPSE) >] | |
| 23-Jan-2017 | |
| RESuME | |
| No | |
| Esch-sur-Alzette | |
| Luxembourg | |
| [en] populism ; democracy ; politics | |
| [en] A chameleonic concept, populism can be defined as an ideology, a communication style, a political strategy, or a misguided category. Its key elements are a positive appreciation of people, a negative view of the elite, and the exaltation of untrammeled popular sovereignty against representative democracy and liberal constitutionalism. The fortune of the term, despite its theoretical and practical drawbacks, is the reflection of intrinsic antinomies of modern democracy and of a growing popular dissatisfaction toward the performance of representative governments and institutions. | |
| University of Luxembourg | |
| Erasmus+ | |
| RESuME project | |
| Researchers ; Professionals ; Students ; General public | |
| http://hdl.handle.net/10993/32152 | |
| 10.25517/RESuME-JyutQzd-2017 | |
| https://resume.uni.lu/story/populism |
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