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Good Change

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Few countries serve as a more useful case study for understanding the global tension between liberal and illiberal conceptions of democracy than Poland. Under the populist Law and Justice (PiS) –le...
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  • 09 September 2025
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Few countries serve as a more useful case study for understanding the global tension between liberal and illiberal conceptions of democracy than Poland. Under the populist Law and Justice (PiS) –led government, a large part of the Polish electorate welcomed the party's "Good Change"—as it described its program—despite accusations of democratic backsliding. PiS offered voters neglected by previous governments a combination of economic redistributionism and cultural traditionalism, supplemented with narratives of bolstering Poland's national prestige and sovereignty. Yet after eight years of success, it was defeated in the October 2023 elections by a "pro-democratic" coalition. The history of PiS shows both the strengths and weaknesses of democratic illiberalism as a challenge to liberal democracy.

  Bill and Stanley analyze the course and causes of the party's successes and failures. The authors deftly outline PiS's assault on democratic institutions, its paradigm-changing redistributive programs, cultural backlash agenda, politics of history, and the reasons for its fall from power. Poland's democracy has proven resilient to the specter of autocratization, but its future development under a new government raises fresh questions. This essential book considers what the rise and fall of Poland's illiberal government reveals about the future of liberal democracy and its ongoing transformations in the twenty-first century.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 360
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 09 September 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503643680
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"A comprehensive political history of post-1989 Poland that shows in detail how the populist Law and Justice party reshaped the Polish political system with a combination of generous social policies and conservative culture wars. Polish—and European—politics will never be the same." —Mitchell A. Orenstein, University of Pennsylvania
Stanley Bill is Professor of Polish Studies, University of Cambridge. He is Chair of the Cambridge Committee for Russian and East European Studies (CamCREES). Ben Stanley is Associate Professor at the Centre for the Study of Democracy, SWPS University.
Acknowledgments
Introduction:Democratic Illiberalism in Power and Defeat
1. Before the Good Change:From Post-Communist to Social-Liberal Divide
2. Left-Behind Poland and Beyond: The Sources of PiS's Support
3. The Assault on Liberal Democratic Institutions
4. Nativist Economics:"A Polish Model of the Welfare State"
5. Cultural Backlash and Liberalizing Response
6. Security, Sovereignty, and the Politics of History
7. The Defeat of PiS and the Rise of 213a New Liberal Government
8. Changes to Democracy:Poland's Illiberalism in Wider Context
Conclusion: The Legacy of the Good Change
Appendix: Variables Used in Figures
Notes
Index