Lexington Books
Pages: 172
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-3933-2 • Hardback • March 2010 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
Hanspeter Kriesi is Director of the Center for Comparative and International Studies, University of Zurich.
Simon Hug is a professor in the Department of Political Science at Université de Genève.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part 1: The Swiss in the age of secularization and individualization
Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Values and Value Change: Theoretical Approaches and Empirical Patterns
Chapter 4 Chapter 2: Changing Religiosity, Changing Politics? The Influence of Traditional and Post-Traditional Forms of Religiosity on Political Attitudes
Chapter 5 Chapter 3: The Transformation of the Ideological Gender Gap in Switzerland
Part 6 Part 2: The Swiss in the age of globalization
Chapter 7 Chapter 4: Islamophobia in Switzerland: A New Phenomenon or a New Name for Xenophobia?
Chapter 8 Chapter 5: Intolerance Begets Intolerance: Explaining Negative Attitudes towards Foreigners and Muslims in Switzerland, 1996-2007
Chapter 9 Chapter 6: Swiss Euroscepticism: Economically or Culturally determined?
Chapter 10 Chapter 7: Integrating the Defence of Traditional Communities into the Libertarian-Authoritarian Divide: The Role of the Swiss People's Party in the Redefinition of Cultural Conflicts
Chapter 11 Chapter 8: Restructuring Swiss Welfare Politics: Post-Industrial Labor Market, Globalization and Welfare Values
Part 12 Part 3: The Swiss in the age of an alleged decline in social capital
Chapter 13 Chapter 9: Why do the Swiss trust their government less and other people more than they used to? The impact of cohorts and periods on political confidence and interpersonal trust in Switzerland
Chapter 14 Chapter 10: Benevolent Against the Odds? Volunteering Patterns in an Individualist Society
Chapter 15 Chapter 11: Swiss Democracy in Crisis? An Analysis of Exit and Voice
Chapter 16 Conclusion
This fascinating book examines the cultural changes that are reshaping Switzerland—a society that illustrates the effects of high levels of prosperity and globalization. It assesses changing mass values in Switzerland from 1989 to 2007, analyzing data from successive waves of the Swiss component of the World Values Survey. The editors, Simon Hug and Hanspeter Kriesi, have assembled a talented group of young Swiss social scientists who have insightfully analyzed changes in the political and cultural values of the Swiss public, and the origins and implications of these changes.
— Ronald Inglehart