Populist Attitudes and Direct Democracy: A Questionable Relationship

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Abstract

Earlier research links citizens’ populist attitudes with the support for referendums. However, the foundations and meaning of this relationship remain unclear. This research note proposes a theoretical, conceptual and methodological discussion that identifies three main problems: studies linking populist attitudes with support for referendums have a rather narrow theoretical framing limited to populist studies, there is much ambiguity surrounding the role of direct democracy in the political system, and there is a tautology in studying the relationship between populist attitudes as measured through various indices and the preferences for direct democracy. Our goal is to discuss such problems and to propose several avenues to circumvent them. In particular, we believe that connecting to adjacent literatures beyond populist studies could be an important improvement.

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Gherghina, S., & Pilet, J. B. (2021). Populist Attitudes and Direct Democracy: A Questionable Relationship. Swiss Political Science Review, 27(2), 496–505. https://doi.org/10.1111/spsr.12451

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