4,611
Views
56
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
New Contenders

Fast and Furious: Podemos’ Quest for Power in Multi-level Spain

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (17)

Marco Meloni & Fabio G. Lupato. (2022) Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: The Evolution of Democratic Digital Innovations in Podemos. South European Society and Politics 27:2, pages 253-278.
Read now
Amuitz Garmendia Madariaga & Pedro Riera. (2022) Territorial Polarisation after Radical Parties’ Breakthrough in Spain. South European Society and Politics 27:1, pages 51-73.
Read now
Dan Mercea & Lorenzo Mosca. (2021) Understanding movement parties through their communication. Information, Communication & Society 24:10, pages 1327-1343.
Read now
Josep Lobera & Martín Portos. (2021) Decentralizing electoral campaigns? New-old parties, grassroots and digital activism. Information, Communication & Society 24:10, pages 1419-1440.
Read now
Lluis de Nadal. (2021) On populism and social movements: from the Indignados to Podemos. Social Movement Studies 20:1, pages 36-56.
Read now
Lluís Orriols & Sandra León. (2020) Looking for Affective Polarisation in Spain: PSOE and Podemos from Conflict to Coalition. South European Society and Politics 25:3-4, pages 351-379.
Read now
Davide Vampa. (2020) Competing forms of populism and territorial politics: the cases of Vox and Podemos in Spain. Journal of Contemporary European Studies 28:3, pages 304-321.
Read now
José Real-Dato & Aleksandra Sojka. (2020) The Rise of (Faulty) Euroscepticism? The Impact of a Decade of Crises in Spain. South European Society and Politics 0:0, pages 1-28.
Read now
Oscar Barberà, Astrid Barrio & Juan Rodríguez-Teruel. (2019) New parties’ linkages with external groups and civil society in Spain: A preliminary assessment. Mediterranean Politics 24:5, pages 646-664.
Read now
Marco Lisi, Iván Llamazares & Myrto Tsakatika. (2019) Economic crisis and the variety of populist response: evidence from Greece, Portugal and Spain. West European Politics 42:6, pages 1284-1309.
Read now
Lorenzo Mosca & Filippo Tronconi. (2019) Beyond left and right: the eclectic populism of the Five Star Movement. West European Politics 42:6, pages 1258-1283.
Read now
Luigi Ceccarini & Fabio Bordignon. (2018) Towards the 5 star party. Contemporary Italian Politics 10:4, pages 346-362.
Read now
Andrés Santana & José Rama. (2018) Electoral support for left wing populist parties in Europe: addressing the globalization cleavage. European Politics and Society 19:5, pages 558-576.
Read now
Marco Lisi & Enrico Borghetto. (2018) Populism, Blame Shifting and the Crisis: Discourse Strategies in Portuguese Political Parties. South European Society and Politics 23:4, pages 405-427.
Read now
Guillem Vidal. (2018) Challenging business as usual? The rise of new parties in Spain in times of crisis. West European Politics 41:2, pages 261-286.
Read now
Anna Bosco & Susannah Verney. (2016) From Electoral Epidemic to Government Epidemic: The Next Level of the Crisis in Southern Europe. South European Society and Politics 21:4, pages 383-406.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (39)

Roberto Pannico & Eva Anduiza. (2022) On time and meaningful partisanship: Stability, strength, and sway of attachment to new parties. Party Politics 29:4, pages 699-710.
Crossref
Marc Guinjoan. (2022) How ideology shapes the relationship between populist attitudes and support for liberal democratic values. Evidence from Spain. Acta Politica 58:2, pages 401-423.
Crossref
Paula do Espírito Santo & Ana Paula Ferreira. (2023) How active are right-wing party members? Portuguese right-wing delegates, from a comparative and a General Incentives Model (GIM) perspective. Acta Politica.
Crossref
Daniel Keith & Luke March. 2023. The Palgrave Handbook of Radical Left Parties in Europe. The Palgrave Handbook of Radical Left Parties in Europe 695 762 .
Daniela Tamayo Álvarez. (2022) El efecto de los factores demográficos y económicos en el voto a la izquierda populista de América Latina Recibido: 29-06-2021 // Aceptado: 22-02-2022 DOI: 10.5209/poso.77078. Política y Sociedad 59:3, pages e77078.
Crossref
Luís de Sousa, Edalina R Sanches & Susana Coroado. (2022) Mapping ethics self-regulation within political parties: Norms, oversight and enforcement. Party Politics, pages 135406882211070.
Crossref
Josep Lobera & Juan Roch. (2022) A nationalist party with non‐nationalistic voters? Discussing the limits of nationalism in party categorisation. Nations and Nationalism 28:2, pages 539-556.
Crossref
Ana M. Guillén, Margarita León & Emmanuele Pavolini. (2022) Are ‘carrots’ better than ‘sticks’? New EU conditionality and social investment policies in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy and Spain. Comparative European Politics 20:2, pages 220-237.
Crossref
José Luis Fernández-Martínez, Pau Alarcón Pérez & Joan Font Fábregas. (2020) What drives process preferences? The role of perceived qualities of policymakers and party preferences. Acta Politica 57:1, pages 117-142.
Crossref
Aida Vizcaíno & Jose M. Pavía. (2022) New parties and matryoshka scissions in Spain. The case of Podemos and Más Madrid. Social Sciences & Humanities Open 6:1, pages 100307.
Crossref
. (2021) Enacting Candor. Democratic Theory 8:2, pages 39-69.
Crossref
Pedro Lourenço. (2021) Studying European Radical Left Parties since the Fall of the Berlin Wall (1990–2019): A Scoping Review. Swiss Political Science Review 27:4, pages 754-777.
Crossref
Hugo Marcos-Marne. (2020) A Tale of Populism? The Determinants of Voting for Left-Wing Populist Parties in Spain. Political Studies 69:4, pages 1053-1071.
Crossref
Laura Chaqués-Bonafont, Camilo Cristancho, Luz Muñoz-Márquez & Leire Rincón. (2020) The contingent character of interest groups–political parties’ interaction. Journal of Public Policy 41:3, pages 440-461.
Crossref
Lluis de Nadal. (2021) Populism and plebiscitarianism 2.0: How Podemos used digital platforms for organization and decision-making. New Media & Society, pages 146144482110387.
Crossref
Sergiu Gherghina & Marius Grad. (2021) Political Game-Changers: The Importance of Leaders for Newly Emerged Parties in Romania. Slavic Review 80:3, pages 608-628.
Crossref
Ioannis Balampanidis, Ioannis Vlastaris, George Xezonakis & Magdalini Karagkiozoglou. (2019) ‘Bridges Over Troubled Waters’? The Competitive Symbiosis of Social Democracy and Radical Left in Crisis-Ridden Southern Europe. Government and Opposition 56:1, pages 59-81.
Crossref
Nuria Font, Paolo Graziano & Myrto Tsakatika. (2019) Varieties of Inclusionary Populism? SYRIZA, Podemos and the Five Star Movement. Government and Opposition 56:1, pages 163-183.
Crossref
Cecilia Biancalana & Davide Vittori. 2021. Digital Parties. Digital Parties 109 126 .
Andrea Pedrazzani & Paolo Segatti. 2021. Politicians in Hard Times. Politicians in Hard Times 291 312 .
Beatriz Carrasco, Elena González & Jean-Baptiste Harguindéguy. 2021. Politicians in Hard Times. Politicians in Hard Times 249 269 .
Sergio Pérez Castaños & Leonardo Sánchez-Ferrer. 2021. Politicians in Hard Times. Politicians in Hard Times 205 225 .
Martín PortosMartín Portos. 2021. Grievances and Public Protests. Grievances and Public Protests 227 255 .
Martín PortosMartín Portos. 2021. Grievances and Public Protests. Grievances and Public Protests 39 64 .
Şeyma Merve TANDOĞAN. (2020) TOPLUMSAL HAREKETTEN SİYASİ HAREKETE: İSPANYA-INDIGNADOS HAREKETİ VE LÜBNAN-BEYRUT MEDİNETİ HAREKETİFROM SOCIAL MOVEMENT TO POLITICAL MOVEMENT: SPAIN-INDIGNADOS MOVEMENT AND LEBANON-BEIRUT MADINATI MOVEMENT. Mehmet Akif Ersoy Üniversitesi İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fakültesi Dergisi 7:3, pages 706-730.
Crossref
Karine Bergès & Eva Espinar-Ruiz. (2020) Feminismos en Podemos: contrapoder, discursos y estrategias de lucha. Arbor 196:796, pages 556.
Crossref
Davide Vittori. (2019) Membership and members’ participation in new digital parties: Bring back the people?. Comparative European Politics 18:4, pages 609-629.
Crossref
Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser & Steven M. Van Hauwaert. (2019) The populist citizen: Empirical evidence from Europe and Latin America. European Political Science Review 12:1, pages 1-18.
Crossref
Mathieu Petithomme. (2019) Penser global, Agir local : Les politiques symboliques du nouveau municipalisme à Barcelone, Cadix et Valence. Pôle Sud n° 51:2, pages 79-98.
Crossref
JOHANNA KANTOLA & EMANUELA LOMBARDO. (2019) Populism and feminist politics: The cases of Finland and Spain. European Journal of Political Research 58:4, pages 1108-1128.
Crossref
Marco Lisi. (2018) Party innovation, hybridization and the crisis: the case of Podemos. Italian Political Science Review/Rivista Italiana di Scienza Politica 49:3, pages 245-262.
Crossref
Raul Gomez & Luis Ramiro. (2017) The limits of organizational innovation and multi-speed membership: Podemos and its new forms of party membership. Party Politics 25:4, pages 534-546.
Crossref
Jean-Baptiste Harguindeguy, Bosco Govantes, Alejandro Peinado García & Cristina Fernández Rivera. (2019) Entre alternance et droitisation : les élections autonomiques du 2 décembre 2018 en Andalousie. Pôle Sud n° 50:1, pages 163-176.
Crossref
Oscar Barberà & Astrid Barrio. (2019) Podemos’ and Ciudadanos’ multi-level institutionalization challengesHerausforderungen der mehrstufigen Institutionalisierung von Podemos und Ciudadanos. Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft 13:2, pages 249-272.
Crossref
Conceição Pequito Teixeira, Paulo de Almeida Pereira & Ana Maria Belchior. 2019. Political Institutions and Democracy in Portugal. Political Institutions and Democracy in Portugal 215 246 .
Santiago Pérez-Nievas, José Rama-Caamaño & Carlos Fernández-Esquer. 2018. Democratizing Candidate Selection. Democratizing Candidate Selection 123 146 .
Samuele Mazzolini & Arthur Borriello. 2018. Podemos and the New Political Cycle. Podemos and the New Political Cycle 227 254 .
Davide Vittori. (2017) Podemos and the Five Stars Movement: Divergent trajectories in a similar crisis. Constellations 24:3, pages 324-338.
Crossref
Byungkee Jung. (2017) The Influence of Electoral System on Party System and the Blocking Effect of Electoral Coalition on It -France, Italy, Greece and Spain-. Journal of Mediterranean Area Studies 19:2, pages 95-123.
Crossref

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.