1st Edition

Routledge Handbook of Sociological Perspectives on the American Presidency Sociopolitical Forces, Leadership, and Governance Volume I

Edited By Adebowale Akande Copyright 2026
696 Pages 12 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This handbook, designed for sociologists, political scientists and historians, offers a compelling examination of the American presidency through the framework of sociological theory. Through a premiere collection of scholarly essays, this volume addresses the “crisis of democracy” in the United States, emphasizing the importance of ethical, evidence-based leadership, highlighting the social... Read more

Introduction: The Presidency as Cultural Battleground: Authoritarian Populism and the Politics of Backlash
Adebowale Akande

Part I: America’s Democratic Dilemma—Presidency and Governance in A Divided Nation 

1. The American Presidency: Authority, Democracy, and the Continuing Struggle for the Rule of Law 
Adebowal Akande, and Mark Goodman

2. Money, Media, And Celebrity Endorsements: The Unseen Influences of the 2024 Us Presidential Election
Vito Bobek, Suzana Sedmak, and Tatjana Horvat

3. The Failed Presidency of Donald Trump from the Trump/Musk/DOGE Assault on Democracy to the Epstein Scandal
Douglas Kellner

4. Presidential Leadership and Electoral Politics: A Case Study of the 2024 U.S. Election
Vito Bobek, Kevin Steigenberger, Simona Kustec

5. United States of Donald Trump: MAGA, the Spectacle, The Schism, and The Takeover of American Democracy
Adebowale Akande, Vito Bobek, Douglas Kellner, and José Filipe Pinto

6. Racism in History and Under Trump: The Anatomy of Exclusion Across Eras
Mark Goodman

7. Populism, Messianism, and Fascist Threats in the Americas
Carlos de la Torre

Part II: The Drivers of Populist Politics—Identity, Power, and the Politics of Narrative

8. Populism: Myths, Fallacies, Typologies, and Democratic Threats
José Filipe Pinto

9. Donald Trump and Negative Populism: Sociological Perspectives on National Identity and Political Divisions
Joseph R. Rudolph, Jr

10. Where Are the Young? The Battle between Common Sense and Meritocracy
Henrik P. Bang                      

11. Donald J. Trump: Revered, Reviled, and the Sociology of Political Polarization
Bruce E. Johansen

12. Race and the Machinery of Demagoguery: The U.S. Political Economy Exposed
Y. G-M. Lulat

13. Presidential Approval and the Midterm Effect: A Sociological Analysis of Public Opinion and Political Accountability
David A. Jones

Part III: The Drivers of Democratic Decline—Leadership, Media, and the Politics of Misinformation

14. The American Presidency: Contrasts and Continuities in Leadership from Bush to Trump
Douglas Kellner

15. Explaining Anti-Eu Prejudice: The European Union and the United States in Comparative Perspective
Yannis A. Stivachtis

16. Fractured Frames and Fearful Fictions: Tucker Carlson’s Media Rhetoric and the Sociology of Misinformation and right-wing Polarization
Burton Speakman

17. Theorizing the Racialization of Post-1965 Nonwhite Immigrants in the United States
Philip Q. Yang and Kavitha Koshy

18. The Democratic Party's Decline and the GOP’s Rise to Trifecta Power: Lessons from the 2024 U.S. Elections
Vito Bobek, Kevin Steigenberger, Simona Kustec

19. The Return of the Strong men
John Pratt

20. Democracy Under Siege: Populism, Demagoguery, and the Rise of Performative Power
Eric Schansberg

Part IV: America’s Global Role—Foreign Policy and Strategic Shifts

21. American Foreign Policy in a Multi-Order World: Power, Influence, and Global Change
José Filipe Pinto

22. The Pragmatist in Chief: Crisis Management, Presidential Models and Middle East Policy in the Obama Years
Luis da Vinha and Anthony Dutton

23. American Exceptionalism through Cultural, Demographic and Economic Lens
Steven G. Koven

24. Presidents, Powers, and Proxy Wars: Geopolitical Perspectives on U.S. Leadership in the Middle East
Armin Krishnan

Part V. Shadowed Legacies and Sociological Reckonings: Race, Memory, and Identity Beyond the Oval Frame

25. Presidential Power and the Sociological Silences: Suicide, Race, And Relational Vulnerability in African American Life
David Lester and Adebowale Akande

26. Why the Hell Would Anybody Study History?
Alfred A. Cave with Barbara Alice Mann and Adebowale Akande

27. Black Identity
Monicka Brown and Philip Q. Yang

28. Why Xenophobia in a Nation Built by Strangers (Immigrants)?
Natsu Taylor Saito

29. Identity Threat, Domain-Specific Self-Esteem, and Intergroup Discrimination: Psychological Foundations of Leadership and Belonging in American Governance
John A. Hunter, Adebowale Akande, and Maurice Stringer

Biography

Adebowale Akande is a distinguished international social theorist and historian of ideas, recognized for his pioneering work in presidential studies, political sociology, leadership psychology, and global organizational behavior. Renowned for advancing cross-cultural leadership theory, he collaborates with leading scholars in American politics and social science.

His research spans presidential behavior, U.S. democracy, international relations, and the sociological psychology of leadership expectations. Dr. Akande has illuminated how CEO political behaviors align with cultural norms, and how social dynamics—cooperation, competition, and power—shape stereotypes and biases.

A foundational member of the landmark 2004 GLOBE study, he has earned numerous accolades, including the Commonwealth Academic Fellowship, the IUPSYS International Award, and the Gordon W. Allport Prize for his work on ambivalent sexism and global family relations. His fellowships span Taiwan, Japan, Austria, and India, reflecting his global scholarly reach.

Currently serving as international director for IR GLOBE in Vancouver, Canada, and as guest professor at several British Columbia universities, Dr. Akande continues to mentor future leaders. His research and editorial leadership have profoundly shaped contemporary understandings of political behavior, American democracy, and cultural dynamics.