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The Challenge of Populism: The Rise of Right-Wing Democratism in Postwar America

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Direct democracy is on the rise in America, according to recent research on referendum, initiative, and recall. This book presents a qualitative analysis of America's current trend toward populism. By tracing the intellectual origins of present populist movements, Michael P. Federici explores the extent to which such movements complement the American Constitutional tradition. In particular, he analyzes post-World War II, right-wing populism--its emergence, characteristics, and historical roots. Throughout this work, Federici reflects on the meaning of democracy; he warns that right-wing populism is not compatible with the American Constitutional tradition.

Federici distinguishes between two types of democracy--constitutional and plebiscitary--which have opposed each other since the time of America's founding fathers. He believes this larger debate must be explored in order to understand the current rise of populism in the United States. Federici argues that plebiscitary democracy is strongly related to populism and that it presents a challenge to the Constitutional tradition. He uncovers the roots of right-wing populism in three economics, religion, and foreign policy. This book offers important insights for journalists, students, and scholars of American history, social movements, sociology, and democracy.

172 pages, Hardcover

First published August 30, 1991

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Michael P. Federici

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176 reviews2 followers
March 4, 2014
Fairly boilerplate argument (though his intellectual sources are solid) about why populism so threatens democracy, a position which is wrong, incidentally. If you're going to be elitist, at least admit it - then we can be in agreement about that much, sir.
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