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Description
(Text)
Populism has fundamentally altered many aspects of world politics. As President Donald J. Trump s recent threats to U.S. allies and his imposition of wide-ranging tariffs have made all too clear, populist leaders can have a major impact not just on domestic but also foreign policy.
The first edition of Populism and Word Politics was the first book-length treatment of populism from an International Relations (IR) perspective. The second edition reflects the continuation and evolution of populism in world politics, and includes a new introduction, updated chapters and an additional contribution on populist security narratives.
Written by leading experts in the field, the chapters in this volume explore the many ways populism and world politics intersect, including the importance of populist leadership and global media as well as populism s impact on trade and the liberal international order.
Presented in an accessible and clear style, this book is an essential resource for students and IR scholars, as well as practitioners seeking a deeper understanding of the phenomenon.
(Table of content)
Chapter 1: Introduction: Analyzing the Nexus Between Populism and International Relations.- Chapter 2: Populism Beyond the Nation.- Chapter 3: How to Become a Leader: Identifying Global Scripts for Populist Leadership.- Chapter 4: Populism and contemporary global media: populist communication logics and the co-construction of transnational identities.- Chapter 5: Studying Populist Security Narratives: An Analytical Framework.- Chapter 6: Sedimented Practices in Trump s Foreign Policy.- Chapter 7: The Populist Radical Right Goes Canadian: An Analysis of Kellie Leitch s Failed 2016-2017 Conservative Party of Canada Leadership Campaign.- Chapter 8: Populists and Foreign Policy: Evidence from Latin America.- Chapter 9: Making (Latin) America Great Again: Lessons from Populist Foreign Policies in the Americas.- Chapter 10: Three Decades of New Zealand First: A Balancing Act Between Populism and Pluralism .- Chapter 11:
(Author portrait)
Frank A. Stengel is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at Kiel University, Germany.
David B. MacDonald is Professor of Political Science at the University of Guelph, Canada, and an honorary academic at the University of Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand.
Dirk Nabers is Professor of International Political Sociology at Kiel University, Germany.



