Political Change in Switzerland

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A01=Clive Church
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Author_Clive Church
Avenir Suisse
Category=JB
Category=JP
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Category=JPHV
Category=JPQ
Category=JPQB
Conservative Democratic Party
CVP
Direct Democracy
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eq_society-politics
EU Agreement
EU Relation
February Votation
Federal Council
Green Liberals
Harmonious Society
Partei Der Schweiz
PLR
political development switzerland
populist movement switzerland
Populist Turn
Schweizerische Volkspartei
Secretaries Of State
Sonderfall
Suisse Romande
SVP/UDC
SVPUDC
swiss establishment
Swiss People's Party
Swiss People’s Party
Swiss Political
Swiss Political System
swiss politics
Swiss Relations
switzerland
switzerland europe
switzerland european union
switzerland immigration
switzerland migrants
switzerland politics
switzerland stability
Switzerland's Place
Switzerland’s Place
UDC
UN
Union Of The Centre
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138386440
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Sep 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Political Change in Switzerland explains the striking recent political developments in Switzerland, an important but surprisingly little known and often misunderstood country, aiming to dissipate prevailing myths about Switzerland in its European context. Firstly, the title provides an analysis of the way the practice and processes of Swiss politics have so dramatically changed over the last 25 years, setting out the differences between outside perceptions and changing Swiss realities. Secondly, it discusses how far the country has moved, from the stability of the post-war period to a new era of uncertainty, in which the so called Sonderfall, or special case, no longer seems to apply. In doing so it analyses the populist movement, centred on the Swiss People’s Party, examining its support and tactical operations, as well as the response of the establishment to the challenges the movement poses, both generally and where key questions of policy on foreigners and the EU are concerned. Finally, the title explains how much of this change is related to Europe, and discusses the prospects for Switzerland, Europe and the EU member states in the light of this new Swiss uncertainty.

The way in which globalization has imposed new stresses on Switzerland, both in external policy and social terms, is the key theme of the title. These stresses have, in turn, encouraged the growth of a new populist movement, drawing on social classes previously supportive of other forces, and employing aggressive new tactics, creating a challenge that the establishment has found it hard to counter, so that stability has been compromised. As a result, Switzerland now faces two linked policy challenges, to find ways of accommodating unease about immigration and to devise a realistic and widely acceptable new relationship with the EU. The book’s underlying belief is that these changes have left the country divided and uncertain about its future.

This title offers in-depth analysis of Switzerland's domestic and European politics and policies. It is also innovative in trying both to bring out the European roots of recent political changes in Switzerland and of the challenges these pose to the Swiss status quo and for the evolution of the EU and member states such as the United Kingdom. This is a book for those interested in Switzerland, academics, business people, diplomats, journalists and political commentators.

Clive H. Church is Emeritus Professor of European Studies at the University of Kent in Canterbury, England. Educated as a historian at Exeter and London Universities, he has taught History, European Studies and Politics at Trinity College Dublin, the University of Lancaster and, finally, at the University of Kent. He has been visiting and working on Switzerland since 1971. He is the author of The Politics and Government of Switzerland (Palgrave, 2004), an edited volume on Switzerland and the European Union (Routledge, 2007) and (with Randy Head) of A Concise History of Switzerland (Cambridge, 2013) together with a large number of articles, contributions and monitoring reports on Switzerland. He has also written widely on European history, integration and the EU treaties.

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