Paula Diehl (Ph.D., Humboldt University, Berlin) is Full Professor of Political Theory, History of Ideas, and Political Culture and Director of the International Populism Research Network at Kiel University, Germany. She was Guest Professor, among others, at Sciences Po (Paris), Washington University (St. Louis), École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (Paris), and the Institute for Advanced Studies (Bologna). Her current research projects are dedicated to populism, political representation, and the concept of the political imaginary. She is the editor (with Till Weber) of the Symposium Populism: Complex Concepts and Innovative Methods, Polity, Volume 54, Number 3, July 2022. Brigitte Bargetz (Ph.D., University of Vienna) is Senior Researcher in Political Theory, History of Ideas and Political Culture and Coordinator of the International Populism Research Network at Kiel University. She was, among others, Professor of Political Theory (interim), University of Passau, Assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Vienna, Professor of Diversity Politics (interim), Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, as well as Visiting Fellow at Charles University, Prague, and The Open University, Milton Keynes. Her current research is about affect theory, populism and democracy, and the welfare state. She is the author of Haunting Sovereignty and the Neurotic Subject: Contemporary Constellations of Fear, Anxiety and Uncertainty, Citizenship Studies, Volume 25, Number 1, 2021, 20–35.
""Populism's diverse political expressions have long been a source of scholarly debate and confusion. In The Complexity of Populism: New Approaches and Methods, leading scholars provide new analytical tools to explain this diversity by conceptualizing populism's multiple dimensions and exploring different methods for the empirical study of both historical and contemporary populisms. The interdisciplinary focus on populism's ideological, communicational, and organizational dimensions offers a framework for comparative analysis that is sure to be very well-received by other scholars looking for coherence amidst populist complexity."" - Kenneth M. Roberts, Professor of Government, Cornell University 'Populism is too often portrayed as a simplistic form of politics. However, this clever and vital volume pushes back against this erroneous assumption by taking the complexity of populism seriously. Recognizing the variation of populist phenomena across the globe, the volume acknowledges the multidimensional nature of populism, suggests new and important methodological avenues for its study, and crucially, embraces interdisciplinarity in examining how populism works. It is vital reading for anyone working on or thinking about populism, both from a theoretical and empirical perspective, and will open up new avenues for studying the most controversial political phenomena of the 21st century.' -Benjamin Moffitt, Australian Catholic University 'Complexity of Populism is an important contribution for those who want to study populism without taking shortcuts. It recognizes that populism cannot be rendered in a clear and distinct idea and reflects the interpretations of democracy. It shows us that to know populism we must become comparativists and interdisciplinarians, have the patience and humility to get out of comfortable generalizations and go to concrete experiences.' -Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University