Fascism, populism and the French Fifth Republic : in the shadow of democracy

Author(s)

    • Fieschi, Catherine

Bibliographic Information

Fascism, populism and the French Fifth Republic : in the shadow of democracy

Catherine Fieschi

Manchester University Press, 2004

  • : pbk
  • : hbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [192]-206) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: hbk ISBN 9780719062087

Description

How can a nation associated with the Declaration of the Rights of Man serve as the context for a successful populist party of the far right? Fascism, Populism and the French fifth Republic brings to the fore the reasons behind this apparent paradox. The author argues that Fifth Republican France offers an ideal set of opportunities for Jean Marie Le Pen's party. Far from preventing the rise of extreme right populist parties, the nature of French democratic institutions and France's intellectual traditions encourage the development of populist parties of the right and the extreme right and grants them a measure of success, while nevertheless succeeding in keeping them out of the main decision-making arenas. Using the tools of comparative politics to examine the ideological components of the French Front National and the manner in which these have interacted with contemporary French Institutions, Fieschi shows how, since 1958, French Institutions have provided the FN with numerous ways in which to permeate French politics as well as how JM Le Pen, in particular, organised the party's strategy in order to best respond to the opportunities offered. Unlike most other books on the far right in France this account uses a historical institutional analysis and a comparative politics framework to shed light on the phenomenon of the FN. In this respect the analysis is broader and more analytically sophisticated and gestures at the potential for such an analysis to be transposed on to other cases.
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9780719062094

Description

This new edition examines some of the philosophical and theoretical issues underlying the 'democratic project' which increasingly dominates the fields of comparative development and international relations. The first concern presented here is normative and epistemological: as democracy becomes more widely accepted as the political currency of legitimacy, the more broadly it is defined. But as agreement decreases regarding the definition of democracy, the less we are able to evaluate how it is working, or indeed whether it is working at all. The second issue is causal: what are the claims being made regarding how best to secure a democratic system in developing states? To what extent do our beliefs and expectations of how political relations ought to be governed distort our understanding of how democratic societies do in fact emerge; and, conversely, to what extent does our understanding of how democracy manifests itself temper our conception of what it ought to be? The volume will be of interest to those in international development studies, as well as political theorists with an interest in applied ethics. -- .

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