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Followers First: Rethinking the Legitimacy of Political Leadership
[journal article]
Abstract The study of political leadership has traditionally focused on leaders, often overlooking how followers actively shape legitimacy through attribution and contestation. In this thematic issue, the focus shifts from leaders to followership and legitimacy, examining how citizens construct and challenge... view more
The study of political leadership has traditionally focused on leaders, often overlooking how followers actively shape legitimacy through attribution and contestation. In this thematic issue, the focus shifts from leaders to followership and legitimacy, examining how citizens construct and challenge political authority. The first set of articles explores the role of leadership attribution, populism, and negative personalisation, showing how charismatic appeal, ideological predispositions, social identification, and emotional biases influence how citizens evaluate leaders. The second group of articles focuses on different dimensions of legitimacy and investigates how leadership distance, representation styles, and visual de-demonisation affect followers' assessment of leaders. The final set extends the discussion from the democratic to the autocratic context and shows how legitimacy and followership also play an essential role in autocratic politics. By using different and novel methodologies, introducing conceptual innovations, and applying these to a wide variety of cases and contexts, the contributions collectively advance the relational approach to political leadership and legitimacy. Ultimately, it lays the groundwork for a new research agenda that redefines leader-follower dynamics, highlighting the contested and evolving nature of political legitimacy across democratic and non-democratic contexts.... view less
Keywords
populism; democracy; leadership; legitimacy; representation; dictatorship; personalization; political leadership
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
autocracy; distance; followership; visual de‐demonisation
Document language
English
Publication Year
2025
Journal
Politics and Governance, 13 (2025)
Issue topic
Legitimacy and Followership in National and International Political Leadership
ISSN
2183-2463
Status
Published Version; reviewed