András Sajó, Ruling by cheating. Governance in Illiberal Democracy
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Wydział Nauk Politycznych i Studiów Międzynarodowych Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Publication date: 2024-12-20
Studia Politologiczne 2024;74
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ABSTRACT
The main focus of András Sajó’s book is the relation between constitutional
and illiberal democracy and the origins of the latter’s popularity. The author describes
the populist technique of “ruling by cheating” by showing – on the example of Poland
and Hungary among others – how populists use liberal democratic concepts in order
to underpin their legitimacy as well as to strengthen their power, build their own elites,
take over autonomous institutions and discriminate against minorities. Another source of
populism’s success is the crisis of Western democracy, reflected both in adopting populists’ policies or rhetoric, and in the decline of the idea of individual freedom in favor of increasing
dependence on the state.
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REFERENCES (3)
1.
Bourne A., Responding to Populist Parties in Europe: The ‘Other People’ vs the ‘Populist People’. Oxford University Press, 2023.
2.
Malkopoulou A., Kirshner A., Militant Democracy and Its Critics. Populism, Parties, Extremism. Edinburgh University Press, 2021.
3.
Sajó A., Ruling by Cheating, Cambridge University Press, 2021.