This volume aims to generate a dialogue between scholarship on populism and social and political theory. It focuses on citizenship, class, gender, cleavages, sovereignty, accountability, participation, leadership, and parties. The volume explores how classical and current theorists developed these categories, how they were used by scholars of populism, and what populism tells us about their heuristic advantages and limitations. The authors of this book have studied populism in Europe, the US, and Latin America from distinct perspectives. The chapters thus focus on experiences in both the Global North and South.
Contributors are: Cecilia Biancalana, Paula Diehl, Reinhard Heinisch, Klaudia Koxha, Alfio Mastropaolo, Oscar Mazzoleni, Enrique Peruzzotti, Kenneth M. Roberts, Luis Roniger, and Carlos de la Torre.
Populism and Key Concepts in Social and Political Theory is now available in paperback for individual customers.
Carlos de la Torre is professor and director of the Center for Larin American Studies at the University of Florida. He has a Ph.D. in Sociology from the New School for Social Research. He is the author of several manuscripts and edited volumes on populism. His most recent books are Global Populisms with Treethep Srisa-nga (Routledge Press, 2021); Populisms: A Quick Immersion (Tibidabo editions, 2019), and Populist Seduction in Latin America (Ohio University Press, second edition 2010). He is the editor of The Routledge Handbook of Global Populism (Routledge Press, 2019), The Promises and Perils of Populism: Global Perspectives (University Press of Kentucky, 2015) and with Cynthia Arnson, Latin American Populism of the Twenty First Century (Johns Hopkins University Press and Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 2013).
Oscar Mazzoleni is a professor in political science and political sociology at the University of Lausanne. He has a degree in Sociology and Ph.D. in History. He was Visiting Professor and Fellow in various universities including Columbia, Cornell, University of Sorbonne I and Science-Po Paris. His research has been published in international journals such as Government and Opposition, Party Politics, Political Studies, Comparative European Politics, and European Politics and Society. He is co-editor of Political Populism. Handbook on Concepts, Questions and Strategies of Research (Nomos, 2021) and Sovereignism and Populism: Citizens, Voters and Parties in Western European Democracies (Routledge, 2021). He is the principal investigator of a four-year international project on populism and conspiracy funded by the national research agencies of Switzerland and Austria.