| When confidence thins, even good laws feel brittle. This book is a clear-eyed tour of how fear, scarcity, and the rise of extremism turned ballots into blunt instruments, and of how ordinary institutions can be rebuilt to earn back belief. It translates the great depression politics of breadlines and slogans into a practical language for today. You will learn why coalition government failures make the loudest voices sound safest; how media and democracy can be tuned for truth rather than heat; and why defending censorship and civil liberties in a storm is not indulgence but infrastructure. With sharp case studies from Weimar to steadier small states, it offers a toolkit for democratic resilience that values cadence over charisma, belonging over spectacle, and honest limits over empty promises. For readers of history, policy, and leadership who want more than warnings, it distils Weimar lessons, unpacks political populism, and revisits us isolationism as a cautionary mirror. The result is a grounded set of lessons for democracy: simple, portable practices that help governments deliver, publics understand, and confidence become a policy outcome rather than a prayer. |
When Democracies Faltered: The 1930s Crisis of Confidence
Hardback | 9789347436345| 280pp
Paperback | 9789347436673 | 280pp
Elena Marceau















