Mojca Pajnik is senior research associate at the Peace Institute in Ljubljana and senior lecturer at the Department of Communication, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. Fields of her research include media and communication, political theory, racism/populism and feminism. Birgit Sauer is professor of Political Science at the department of Political Science at the University of Vienna. She was director of the graduate school “Gender, Violence and Agency in the Era of Globalisation” (GIK). She has co-coordinated a research project in the 6th FP. She was and is partner and/or director in several EU funded and nationally funded research projects. Her research fields include gender and governance, gender, religion and democracy, right-wing populism and racism as well as politics of affect.
This excellent book links the origins of contemporary populism to the erosion of democratic institutions, and shows how the rise of populist parties on the radical right further threatens democracy across Europe. A common theoretical and empirical framework gives the book a rare unity of argument and analysis seldom found in edited volumes. The focus on how these parties use digital and social media to communicate directly with large publics helps explain the rapid rise of the radical right in so many democracies. This book is a must read for everyone concerned about the disruption of communication and political institutions in contemporary democracies. - Lance Bennett, University of Washington Drawing on insights from a great variety of European countries this book provides a comprehensive yet detailed account of populist discourses and practices in online media. Given the centrality of online communication in current mediatized democracies, the volume is a much-needed addition to the literature on media and populism and among the very first to provide a systematic account of how populist parties and movements make use of the web. The contributions range from comparative analysis with a focus on the participatory potentials of online communication to detailed depictions of different exclusionary discourses. The book ends with an important chapter on strategies to counter populist discourses. On the whole the volume is an indispensable read for any scholar working on the intersection of media and populism. - Hajo Boomgaarden, University of Vienna