This book explores the most important aspects of populism as a significant social phenomenon. It recapitulates the approaches to defining populism in the social sciences, singles out the most important concepts in the definition of populism, and presents them to the readership.
This book identifies the turning points in Habermas's work and his transition from one stage to another in the development of his theoretical oeuvre.
This book offers a systematic and multifaceted analysis of the Greens on the levels of political philosophy, political concepts, social movement, political parties, and political ideology.
This book aims to explain the self as understood decades ago and its evolution in the time of postmodernism.