<i>‘At a time when original critiques of Israel are badly required, this book expertly demonstrates how the populist turn taken by successive right wing governments gained support and mobilisation within Israeli civil society. Not only does it provide a much needed Gramscian analysis of how populism in Israel mainstreamed to destructive levels but also provide a sound case-study to examine similar right-wing populist turns in other states.’</i>
- Owen Worth, University of Limerick, Ireland,
<i>‘Filc and Avigur-Eshel offer a concise analysis of the Likud party's right-wing governments in Israel. They employ the Gramscian concept of hegemonic project to decipher how Likud’s exclusionary populism succeeds in juggling neo-liberal growth policy and wide-spread social support, as well as to expose the inherent crisis tendencies involved. This is one of the most intriguing accounts of political sociology cum political economy that I have read in a long time.’</i>
- Uri Ram, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Israel,