Shaping the people: Populism and the politics of identity formation in South America

Jason Seawright, Rodrigo Barrenechea

Producción científica: Capítulo del libro/informe/acta de congresoCapítulo de librorevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

Can populism be a source of long-lasting changes in citizens' beliefs, behaviors, and political identities? This chapter follows recent literature in treating populism as identity-shaping. Populist movements mobilize constituencies based on anti-establishment appeals that draw a wedge between a "corrupt elite" and a "victimized people" of the nation. It is electorally advantageous to define the "people" in a broad but bounded way, such that there is simultaneously a large, heterogeneous coalition of voters and a clearly defined enemy. We show through observational and experimental evidence that populism's emphasis on a broad but bounded concept of the people can shape the distribution of citizens' identities by reducing the cost and increasing the benefit of assuming non-elite social identities. Populist discourse is thus an identity-shaping political tool that can serve to incorporate those at the margins. This heterogeneity, however, creates a sustainability problem. With little to glue its members together beyond their anti-elite status, populist support coalitions are particularly vulnerable to disintegration after victory. We argue that some correlates of populism, like redistributional economic policies, and a tendency to organize constituents, are driven by the populists' need to stabilize their support coalitions. We argue that these are identity-stabilizing political tools.
Idioma originalInglés
Título de la publicación alojadaThe Inclusionary Turn in Latin American Democracies
EditoresDiana Kapiszewski, Steven Levitsky, Deborah J. Yashar
EditorialCambridge University Press
Páginas491-517
Número de páginas27
ISBN (versión impresa)9781108895835
EstadoPublicada - 2021

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