The Far-Right in World Politics/World Politics in the Far-Right (original) (raw)
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The Longue Durée of the Far-Right: An Introduction
Richard Saull, Alexander Anievas, Neil Davidson, and Adam Fabry, ‘The Longue Durée of the Far-Right: An Introduction’, in Richard Saull, Alexander Anievas, Neil Davidson, and Adam Fabry (eds.) The Longue Durée of the Far-Right: An International Historical Sociology (London: Routledge, 2015), 1-20., 2015
French Politics, 2020
Over the past decades, the far right has become one of the most studied phenomena in international political science, attracting more attention than all other party families combined. This article critically assesses the scholarly progress made so far and discusses what future research on the far right should focus on. It argues that although the number of studies has grown disproportionately, scholars have been slow in acknowledging that far-right politics have entered a new phase, where traditional aspects progressively lost momentum and new ones acquired central stage. To understand the transformations in the contemporary far right, scholars must address three shortcomings of international comparative research-Eurocentrism, Electoralism and Externalism. Today, we need to re-embed the study of the far right into the broader literature on party politics and political sociology, acknowledging the diversity that exists within the far right, its diffusion beyond (western) Europe and its mobilization outside the electoral arena.
The Phenomenon of the European Far Right and Their Foreign Policy Positions
Sociology of Power, 2021
The article addresses two major issues. The first issue concerns the phenomenon of the European far right. The article argues that the "far right" is an umbrella term that refers to a broad range of ideologues, groups, movements and political parties to the right of the centre right. Fascism was the very first far-right ideology to have acquired worldwide significance. After the Second World War, fascism was discredited in Europe, but it - in the form of neo-fascism - survived in small West European movements and groups that still hoped for an ultranationalist revolution. Nevertheless, the West European postwar far right preferred to adapt to the new political environment rather than reject it. Hence, the postwar far right evolved into two major forms: (1) radical right-wing populist parties, which are the most common type of the far right today, and (2) the New Right that operates on the cultural and intellectual, rather than political, level. The second issue concerns foreign policy orientations of the European far right, and the article discusses these orientations through the prism of the attitudes of the far right towards globalisation, the USA, NATO, European integration, and Russia.
‘Fascism… but with an open mind.’Reflections on the Contemporary Far Right in (Western) Europe
Fascism, 2013
The political science community would have us believe that since the 1980s something entirely detached from historical or neo-fascism has emerged in (Western) Europe - a populist radicalization of mainstream concerns - a novel form of ‘radical right-wing populism.’ Yet the concept of ‘radical right-wing populism’ is deeply problematic because it suggests that (Western) Europe’s contemporary far right has become essentially different from forms of right-wing extremism that preceded it, and from forms of right-wing extremism that continue to exist alongside it. Such an approach, as this First Lecture on Fascism argues, fails to appreciate the critical role that neo-fascism has played, and still plays, in adapting Europe’s contemporary far right to the norms and realities of multi-ethnic, liberal-democratic society. Political scientists should fixate less on novelty and the quest for neat typologies, and instead engage far more seriously with (neo) fascism studies.
Trouble on the Far Right. Introductory Remarks (2016)
In Europe, the far right is gaining momentum on the streets and in parliaments. By taking a close look at contemporary practices and strategies of far-right actors, the present volume explores this right-ward shift of European publics and politics. It assembles analyses of changing mobilization patterns and their effects on the local, national and transnational level. International experts scrutinize new forms of coalition building, mainstreaming and transnationalization tendencies as aspects of diversified far-right politics in Europe. More information: http://www.transcript-verlag.de/978-3-8376-3720-5/trouble-on-the-far-right
The liberal facade of the contemporary far right
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Book review of Cas Mudde, The Far Right Today. Cambridge MA: Polity Press 2019 and of Erik Lars Berntzen, Liberal roots of Far-Right Activism: The Anti-Islamic Movement in the 21st Century. London and New York: Routledge 2020