References
AfD (Alternative für Deutschland)
2021[URL]
Ahmad, Irfan
2019 “Populism: A Political Anthropology Approach.” Public Anthropologist 1 (2): 224–245. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Benet-Martínez, Verónica, and Shigehiro Oishi
2008 “Culture and Personality.” In Handbook of Personality: Theory and Research (3rd ed.), ed. by Oliver P. John, Richard W. Robins, and Lawrence A. Pervin, 542–567. New York: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Breeze, Ruth
2019 “Positioning the People and its Enemies: Populism and Nationalism in AfD and UKIP.” Javnost – the Public 26 (1): 89–104. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2020 “Angry Tweets: A Corpus Assisted Study of Anger in Populist Political Discourse.” Journal of Language Aggression and Conflict 8 (1): 118–145. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
De Cleen, Benjamin, and Yannis Stavrakakis
2017 “Distinctions and Articulations: A Discourse-Theoretical Framework for the Study of Populism and Nationalism.” Javnost – The Public 24 (4): 301–425. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Desai, Shweta, and Amarnath Amarasingam
2020#Coronajihad. Covid-19, Misinformation and Anti-Muslim Violence in India. Strong Cities. [URL]
Douglas, Mary
[1966] 2002Purity and danger. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Durkheim, Émile
[1912] 1961The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life, trans. by Joseph Swain. New York: Collier Books.Google Scholar
Fassin, Didier
2017The Endurance of Critique. Anthropological Theory 17 (1): 4–29. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gintsburg, Sarali, Ana María Fernández-Vallejo, and Karima Tayaa
2020Identidad y expectativas en la comunidad marroquí de Navarra: la perspectiva de las mujeres. Pamplona: Observatorio de la Realidad Social de Navarra.Google Scholar
Hann, Chris
2019Anthropology and Populism. Anthropology Today 35 (1): 1–2. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Hofstede, Geert
2001Culture’s Consequences: Comparing Values, Behaviors, Institutions, and Organizations across Nations (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.Google Scholar
2022Country Comparisons. [URL]
Jain, Ritika
2020 “Covid-19: How fake news and Modi Government messaging fuelled India’s latest spiral of Islamophobia.” Scroll.in. [URL]
Janmyr, Maja
2021 “ ‘Sudanese Refugees’ and the ‘Syrian Refugee Response’ in Lebanon: Racialised Hierarchies, Processes of Invisibilisation, and Resistance.” Refugee Survey Quarterly 41(1): 131–156. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Khan, Aaqib
2022 “Identity as Crime: How Indian Mainstream Media’s Coverage Demonized Muslims as Coronavirus Spreaders.” In Pandemic and Crisis Discourse: Communicating Covid-19 and Public Health Strategy, ed. by Andreas Musolff, Ruth Breeze, Kayo Kondo, and Sara Vilar-Lluch, 355–374. London: Bloomsbury. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Laclau, Ernesto
2005On Populist Reason. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Marcus, George E.
1997 “The Uses of Complicity in the Changing Mise-en-Scène of Anthropological Fieldwork.” Representations 59, 85–108. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Mercator Forum
2021MIDEM-Jahresstudie: Corona und Rechtspopulismus. Dresden: Technische Universität Dresden.Google Scholar
Moffitt, Benjamin
2015 “How to Perform Crisis: A Model for Understanding the Key Role of Crisis in Contemporary Populism.” Government and Opposition 50 (2), 189–217. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
2016The Global Rise of Populism: Performance, Political Style and Representation. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Mudde, Cas
2004 "The Populist Zeitgeist." Government and Opposition 39 (4): 541-563. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Musolff, Andreas
2016Political Metaphor Analysis. Discourse and Scenarios. London: Bloomsbury.Google Scholar
Pasieka, Agnieszka
2019 “Anthropology of the Far Right: What if we like the ‘Unlikable Others?Anthropology Today 35 (1): 3–6. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
OECD
2021International Migration Database. [URL]
Taggart, Paul
2000Populism. Milton Keynes: Open University Press.Google Scholar
Tohme Adaime, Zeina
2021 “Populism, Identities and Social Movements in Lebanon: From a Sectarian Identity to a Popular One?Hypothesis 3 (2): 4–27.Google Scholar
United Nations
2018World Population Prospects – Population Division. [URL]
Vox
2021[URL]
Weiss, Daniel
2022 “How Autocrats Cope with the Corona Challenge: Belarus vs. Russia.” In Pandemic and Crisis Discourse: Communicating Covid-19 and Public Health Strategy, ed. by Andreas Musolff, Ruth Breeze, Kayo Kondo, and Sara Vilar-Lluch, 61–78. London: Bloomsbury. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
World Bank
2021Lebanon: Overview. [URL]. DOI logo
Wynn, Lisa
2021 “The Pandemic Imaginerie: Infectious Bodies and Military-Police Theater in Australia.” Cultural Anthropology 36 (3): 350–359. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Zienkowski, Jan, and Ruth Breeze