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Righteous demagogues : Populist politics in South Asia and beyond / Adnan A. Naseemullah and Pradeep K. Chhibber

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: New York Oxford University Press (Replika Press) 2024Edition: ReprintDescription: x, 277 pages 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780197799192 (Paperback)
DDC classification:
  • 320.56
Contents:
1. Introduction; 2. Studying Populism in India and Pakistan; 3. The Foundations of the Moral Contract; 4. Post-Colonial Statism and Crises of Representation; 5. Reordering Populists of the Left; 6. Political Fragmentation, Liberalization and Crises of Representation; 7. Additive Populists of the Right; 8. Populist Politics in Europe and Latin America; 9. Populist Politics in the United States; 10. Conclusion.
Summary: Righteous Demagogues explores the causes, dynamics, and consequences of populist politics in South Asia and beyond. It argues that populist mobilizations are rooted in crises of representation, and populism is a symptom not an underlying cause of democratic malaise. Populist leaders, in framing their appeals, evoke the moral contract—that states are obligated to redress certain types of inequality—and promise its restoration, in ways that resonate with voters across lines of partisanship and social divisions, leading party system change. Depending on how broadly populist appeals resonate, different types of populism emerge, with consequences ranging from the rejection of populists to varying forms of democratic backsliding. The book examines the dynamics of populist politics primarily through four cases in South Asia. In the late 1960s, Indira Gandhi in India and Zulfiqar Bhutto in Pakistan effected reordering populist mobilizations on the left, against the de facto oligarchic regimes of the Congress party and the Ayub Khan government, mobilizing workers, peasants, and the nascent middle classes against widespread exclusion and inequity. In the mid-2010s, Narendra Modi and Imran Khan effected additive populist mobilizations of the right, mobilizing diverse middle classes across India and Pakistan respectively against perceived corruption and inequity. The book applies the framework and typology to explain the causes, dynamics, and consequences of populism in Latin America, Europe and the United States.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals for 2024-25
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Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Materials specified Status Notes Barcode
BOOKs National Law School General Stacks 320.56 NAS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) PB Available Recommended by Dr. Manpreet Singh Dhillon 40069

1. Introduction;
2. Studying Populism in India and Pakistan;
3. The Foundations of the Moral Contract;
4. Post-Colonial Statism and Crises of Representation;
5. Reordering Populists of the Left;
6. Political Fragmentation, Liberalization and Crises of Representation;
7. Additive Populists of the Right;
8. Populist Politics in Europe and Latin America;
9. Populist Politics in the United States;
10. Conclusion.

Righteous Demagogues explores the causes, dynamics, and consequences of populist politics in South Asia and beyond. It argues that populist mobilizations are rooted in crises of representation, and populism is a symptom not an underlying cause of democratic malaise. Populist leaders, in framing their appeals, evoke the moral contract—that states are obligated to redress certain types of inequality—and promise its restoration, in ways that resonate with voters across lines of partisanship and social divisions, leading party system change. Depending on how broadly populist appeals resonate, different types of populism emerge, with consequences ranging from the rejection of populists to varying forms of democratic backsliding.
The book examines the dynamics of populist politics primarily through four cases in South Asia. In the late 1960s, Indira Gandhi in India and Zulfiqar Bhutto in Pakistan effected reordering populist mobilizations on the left, against the de facto oligarchic regimes of the Congress party and the Ayub Khan government, mobilizing workers, peasants, and the nascent middle classes against widespread exclusion and inequity. In the mid-2010s, Narendra Modi and Imran Khan effected additive populist mobilizations of the right, mobilizing diverse middle classes across India and Pakistan respectively against perceived corruption and inequity. The book applies the framework and typology to explain the causes, dynamics, and consequences of populism in Latin America, Europe and the United States.

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