Tentatii neopopuliste in Europa de Est

by Adrian Cioflanca,

The reinventing of politics in Eastern Europe brought about ambiguous side-effects. The most salient is populism, which surfaced again after an interruption of fifty years. The current East European populism is however more refined than its historical ancestor and relates well to the Western neo-populism of our days. While extremism appears somehow appeased in the style of these new parties the radical core of the doctrine is still there, keeping it a threat to democracy.

published in Vol 2 - No 1 - 2002 // Democratization theory
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Advisory Board

  • Alina Mungiu-Pippidi (chair) Hertie School of Governance
  • Larry Diamond Stanford University
  • Tom Gallagher University of Bradford
  • Alena Ledeneva University College London
  • Michael McFaul Stanford University
  • Dennis Deletant Georgetown University
  • Helen Wallace London School of Economics and Political Science

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  • Claudiu Tufiș
  • Bogdan Iancu
  • George Jiglau
  • Ingi Iusmen
  • Gabriel Bădescu
  • Andrei Macsut
  • Laura Voinea

Published by:

Societatea Academica Romana