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Populism, Nativism, and Economic Uncertainty
Details
This project offers an in-depth look at the three 2017 elections held in Western Europe: France, Germany, and the UK. With events like Brexit and a general rise in right-wing populism across highly industrialized nations, understanding the underlying causes of increasingly extreme electoral behavior is both valuable and prescient. A highly theoretically-focused and current project, it provides a consistent methodological and analytic approach that uses election study data and primary sources to offer a complete and cogent picture of this complex phenomenon as can only found by examining the attitudes and behaviors of the most powerful of democratic participants: the voters.
Provides a contextualized understanding of voting decisions in three crucial elections that took place in Western Europe in 2017 Useful for researchers on both sides of the Atlantic who are interested in electoral research as well as the rise of extremism Draws on direct individual-level survey evidence from national election studies
Autorentext
Delton T. Daigle is an Assistant Professor at George Mason University, USA.
Jos**é**phine Neulen is a graduate student at George Mason University, USA.
Austin Hofeman is a doctoral candidate at George Mason University, USA.
Klappentext
Daigle's, Neulen's, and Hofeman's comparative analysis of the 2017 elections in Germany, Britain, and France puts populism in a broader perspective. The breadth of their public opinion data and the leverage of their comparative design allows them to scrutinize systematically some popular explanations for the rise of right-wing populism. This could hardly be more timely.
Christopher Cochrane, Associate Professor, University of Toronto, Canada
This gem of a book is a high-quality investigation into a pressing phenomenon in economically-advanced democracies: the success of the extreme right in France, Great Britain and Germany.
Delia Dumitrescu, Lecturer in Media and Cultural Politics, University of East Anglia, UK
This project offers an in-depth look at the three 2017 elections held in Western Europe: France, Germany, and the UK. With events like Brexit and a general rise in right-wing populism across highly industrialized nations, understanding the underlying causes of increasingly extreme electoral behavior is both valuable and prescient. A highly theoretically-focused and current project, it provides a consistent methodological and analytic approach that uses election study data and primary sources to offer a complete and cogent picture of this complex phenomenon as can only found by examining the attitudes and behaviors of the most powerful of democratic participants: the voters.
Inhalt
- Introduction.- 2. Literature Review.- 3. Methods.- 4. France 2017.- 5. Great Britain.- 6. Germany 2017.- 7. Comparing Across the 2017 Elections in Britain, France, and Germany.- 8. Discussion / Conclusion.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09783030024345
- Sprache Englisch
- Auflage 1st edition 2019
- Größe H216mm x B153mm x T14mm
- Jahr 2018
- EAN 9783030024345
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 3030024342
- Veröffentlichung 27.11.2018
- Titel Populism, Nativism, and Economic Uncertainty
- Autor Delton T. Daigle , Austin Hofeman , Joséphine Neulen
- Untertitel Playing the Blame Game in the 2017 British, French, and German Elections
- Gewicht 338g
- Herausgeber Springer International Publishing
- Anzahl Seiten 168
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Genre Politikwissenschaft