Nordicum-Mediterraneum (Mar 2020)

Populism as an Essentially Contested Concept or: On the Dangers of Centrism

  • Hans Marius Hansteen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.33112/nm.15.1.33
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. D4

Abstract

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The term «populism» is most often used polemically, and notably as a pejorative term, denoting an actual or potential threat to democracy. If, however, all problems and challenges to democracy are projected into an image of the populist danger, we encounter nothing but «centrism» as a mirror-image of «populism». Theories of «radical democracy» propose a more analytical concept of «populism», denoting the political dynamics of social conflict, i.e. how popular frustrations, claims and demands are articulated. In this perspective, political «agonism» is vital to democracy. My own take on these questions: «Democracy» is an essentially contested concept, but if we a central feature is that the «people» («demos») is the basis for the legitimacy of its institutions and policies, we must recognize that conflicts over the symbolic representation of «the people» are fundamental. To dismiss the problem is as dangerous as to claim that it is solved.

Keywords