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Populism, Media and Journalismby JULIÁN DURAZO-HERRMANN,
15/12/2021Populist practices and rhetoric are an integral part of politics in every region of the world. Populist rhetoric is ubiquitous in election campaigns and colors the policies of many governing parties, while populist forces have forced significant policy changes in many areas, from immigration to reproductive health. While there are several definitions of populism from different perspectives, many of them emphasize two concepts. First, that of a genuine and virtuous people; second, distrust of elites. The contours of the people and the identity of the elites in question vary according to context, as do the ideological positions of the proponents of populism. Populism manifests itself at several levels: public opinion may echo populist positions; mainstream and social media may carry populist discourses; political parties and movements and their leaders may be associated with populist agendas. The notion of populism is polysemous and full of empirical contradictions, not to mention the theoretical debates surrounding it. This special issue explores the complex relationship between populism, media and journalism at all these levels, separately or in combination. Several questions are addressed: How do the media cover populist parties and what role do journalists play in (de)legitimizing their ideas? How do populist discourses influence partisan competition? How does populist rhetoric, in a given context, conceive of the elites and the people?
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Introduction to Pink Tides, Right Turns in Latin America, Globalizations special issueby CHARMAIN LEVY,
21/11/2021This special issue emerged from the seminar of the same name in which took place at the Université du Québec en Outaouais in Gatineau, Quebec in June 2019. It focused on two interrelated political and economic dynamics currently taking place in Latin America. First, the decline of the wave of Left and Centre-Left governments that emerged in the region in the early 2000s, known as the Pink Tide. Second is the recent emergence of the region’s new right-wing political and social movements, which picked up in intensity and influence around 2015.
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Introduction to: Exploring the Repertoire of Strategies of Resistance to Routinised Violence in Informal Workplacesby JEAN FRANÇOIS MAYER,
8/2/2021This Special Issue results from two panels organised for the 2018 Congress of the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) in Barcelona: ‘Informal and Precarious Labour After the Pink Tide: New Challenges and Emerging Responses’ and ‘Exploring the Repertoire of Everyday Forms of Resistance to Routinised Violence in Informal Workplaces’.
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Comparison in Journalism, Media and Politicsby JULIÁN DURAZO-HERRMANN,
1/12/2017To study journalism, media or politics is to study each topic individually as well as in the context of their relationships with each other and with the societies in which they operate and to which they contribute.
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