This edited book examines the growing worldwide phenomenon of civilizational populism in democratic nation-states and brings together research that explores this in a wide variety of religious, political, and geographic contexts. In doing so, the book shows how, from Europe to India and Pakistan, and from Indonesia to the Americas, populists increasingly define national belonging through civilizational identity, claiming that the world can be divided into several religion-defined civilizations with incompatible values. The volume also discusses the complex relationship between civilizational populism, democracy and nationalism and shows how nationalists often use civilizational identity to help define ingroups and outgroups within their society.With this, the book investigates the salience of the concept, its widespread and influential nature, and also explains how populists construct civilizational identities, and the factors behind the rise of civilizational populism.
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Chapter 1: Civilizational Populism in Nation-States and Democracy.- Chapter 2: Civilizational Populism: Definition, Literature, Theory, and Practice.- Chapter 3: USA, France and Poland: Christian Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 4: Turkey: Islamist Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 5: Pakistan: Islamist Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 6: Malaysia: Islamist Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 7: Indonesia: Islamist Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 8: India: Hindu Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 9: Sri Lanka: Buddhist Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 10: Israel: Jewish Civilizational Populism.- Chapter 11: Civilizational Populism and Democracy.
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This edited book examines the growing worldwide phenomenon of civilizational populism in democratic nation-states and brings together research that explores this in a wide variety of religious, political, and geographic contexts. In doing so, the book shows how, from Europe to India and Pakistan, and from Indonesia to the Americas, populists increasingly define national belonging through civilizational identity, claiming that the world can be divided into several religion-defined civilizations with incompatible values. The volume also discusses the complex relationship between civilizational populism, democracy and nationalism and shows how nationalists often use civilizational identity to help define ingroups and outgroups within their society.With this, the book investigates the salience of the concept, its widespread and influential nature, and also explains how populists construct civilizational identities, and the factors behind the rise of civilizational populism.Ihsan Yilmaz is Research Professor and Chair of Islamic Studies at the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalisation (ADI), Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia. He has been working on religion and politics in majority and minority contexts, nation-building, citizenship, securitization, populism, authoritarianism, and digital authoritarianism.
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Explores civilizational populism in democratic nation-states and how widespread and influential it has become Discusses the complex relationship between civilizational populism, democracy and nationalism Elaborates on how populists construct civilizational identities
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9789819942619
Publisert
2023-09-09
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer Verlag, Singapore
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
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