Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / ECPR Press
Pages: 394
978-1-78552-124-9 • Hardback • July 2015 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
978-1-78552-234-5 • Paperback • July 2016 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
978-1-78552-220-8 • eBook • January 2016 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Hanspeter Kriesi holds the Stein Rokkan Chair in Comparative Politics at the European University Institute in Florence and has previously taught at the universities of Amsterdam, Geneva and Zurich. He was the director of a Swiss national research programme on the ‘Challenges to democracy in the 21st century’ from 2005–12.Takis S Pappas is Associate Professor at the University of Macedonia, Greece, and during this project, was a Marie Curie Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence. His most recent book is Populism and Crisis Politics in Greece (Palgrave 2014). He is currently working on a new book project under the tentative title Democratic Illiberalism: How Populism Grows.
List of Figures and Tables vii
List of Contributors xi
Preface xv
Chapter One – Populism in Europe During Crisis: An Introduction 1
Hanspeter Kriesi and Takis S. Pappas
PART I: THE NORDIC REGION
Chapter Two – Institutionalised Right-Wing Populism in Times of
Economic Crisis: A Comparative Study of the Norwegian
Progress Party and the Danish People’s Party 23
Anders R. Jupskås
Chapter Three – Business as Usual: Ideology and Populist Appeals of
the Sweden Democrats 41
Ann-Cathrine Jungar
Chapter Four – Exploiting the Discursive Opportunity of the Euro Crisis:
The Rise of the Finns Party 57
Tuomas Ylä-Anttila and Tuukka Ylä-Anttila
PART II: THE WESTERN REGION
Chapter Five – The Revenge of the Ploucs: The Revival of Radical
Populism under Marine Le Pen in France 75
Hans-Georg Betz
Chapter Six – Populism in Belgium in Times of Crisis: Intensification of
Discourse, Decline in Electoral Support 91
Teun Pauwels and Matthijs Rooduijn
Chapter Seven – Dutch Populism During the Crisis 109
Stijn van Kessel
Chapter Eight – The Populist Discourse of the Swiss People’s Party 125
Laurent Bernhard, Hanspeter Kriesi and Edward Weber
vi European Populism in the Shadow of the Great Recession
Chapter Nine – The Primacy of Politics: Austria and the
Not-so-Great Recession 141
Kurt Richard Luther
PART III: THE SOUTHERN REGION
Chapter Ten – Italy: A Strong and Enduring Market for Populism 163
Giuliano Bobba and Duncan McDonnell
Chapter Eleven – Greek Populism: A Political Drama in Five Acts 181
Takis S. Pappas and Paris Aslanidis
PART IV: THE CENTRAL-EASTERN REGION
Chapter Twelve – The Economic Crisis in the Shadow of Political Crisis:
The Rise of Party Populism in the Czech Republic 199
Vlastimil Havlík
Chapter Thirteen – The Delayed Crisis and the Continuous Ebb of
Populism in Slovakia’s Party System 217
Peter Učeň
Chapter Fourteen – Plebeians, Citoyens and Aristocrats or Where is the
Bottom of Bottom-up? The Case of Hungary 235
Zsolt Enyedi
Chapter Fifteen – The Post-Populist Non-Crisis in Poland 251
Ben Stanley
PART V: THE ANGLO-CELTIC REGION
Chapter Sixteen – The Great Recession and the Rise of Populist
Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom 273
Matthew Goodwin
Chapter Seventeen – Everywhere and Nowhere: Populism and the
Puzzling Non-Reaction to Ireland’s Crises 287
Eoin O’Malley and John FitzGibbon
CONCLUSION
Chapter Eighteen – Populism and Crisis: A Fuzzy Relationship 303
Takis S. Pappas and Hanspeter Kriesi
Bibliography 327
Index 363
This volume, covering twenty-five populist parties in seventeen European states, presents the first comparative study of the impact of the Great Recession on populism. Chapters offer a highly differentiated view of how the interplay between economic and political crises helped produce patterns of populist development across Europe. '…a convincing, informative and relevant analysis'
— Daniele Caramani, University of Zurich