01568nam a22001577a 4500999001900000008004100019100003300060245002700093260003100120300003200151520106900183773003101252906001301283942000701296952010701303 c524748d524748240116b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aWeinstock, Daniel M. 948066 aConfronting populism  aSocial and Legal Studies  a32(6), Dec, 2023: p.877-892 aThe core populist claim is that ‘the people’ have been unjustly neglected by government. This core claim, while unexceptionable on its face, tends to be associated with claims that would corrode liberal democratic institutions. It is important that political and legal theorists identify the claims made by citizens who may be attracted by populist political forms, lest they manifest themselves in political forms toxic to (broadly understood) liberal democratic norms and institutions. They must address these claims, even as they also consider ways in which to confront these political forms. An example of how this work might proceed can be gleaned from some recent democratic theory and practice, which has ‘democratized’ membership in political parties as well as the process of selection of the party leader. This apparent democratization both disserves the cause of democratic deliberation, and opens the door to the risk of populist takeover of traditional parties. – Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/09646639221143509  aSocial and Legal Studies  aPOPULISM cAR 00102ddc40709399795aIIPAbIIPAd2024-01-16h32(6), Dec, 2023: p.877-892pAR130555r2024-01-16yAR