Extremismo y migración

This topic refers to the relationship between extremism and migration. The term extremism is often defined as the holding of extreme political or religious views, which may invoke violence. Extremism can be manifested in societies in various forms, and extremist groups can arise among both migrant and host populations.

This topic includes  literature on radicalization, homegrown terrorism, the securitization of migration, and the relationship between far-right ideology and anti-migrant attitudes.

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Immigration and electoral support for the far-left and the far-right

Authors Anthony Edo, Yvonne Giesing, Jonathan Öztunc, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name European Economic Review
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4 Journal Article

Political Violence in Crisis-Ridden Greece: Evidence from the Far Right and the Far Left

Authors Lamprini Rori, Vasiliki Georgiadou, Costas Roumanias
Year 2022
Journal Name JOURNAL OF MODERN GREEK STUDIES
Citations (WoS) 1
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5 Journal Article

Immigration, left and right

Authors Sonia Alonso, Saro Claro da Fonseca
Year 2012
Journal Name Party Politics
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12 Journal Article

Transformations in French anti-Semitism

Authors Nonna Mayer
Year 2007
Journal Name INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONFLICT AND VIOLENCE
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13 Journal Article

Welfare State and the Rise of Extreme Politics in Europe

Description
Within the last few decades the European political landscape changed significantly with the rise of extreme right and far left populist parties in countries of Western Europe and various extremist and populist parties in countries of Eastern Europe. The appeals of these parties differ, but their commonality is that they represent a large group of disaffected citizens who view themselves as losers of changes brought by deindustrialization, European integration and globalization. My proposed research aims to offer a theoretically driven empirical investigation of the impact of welfare state capacity to respond to social and economic changes generated by these processes on the rise of radical political appeals and the support for radical political parties. I expect that the strength of populist appeals and support for populist political parties across Europe is strongly affected by the failure of welfare states to address problems of economic insecurity, inequality and social exclusion. The research will provide a comprehensive mapping of the performance of European welfare states in responding to challenges of post-industrial period with respect to employment, social inequality, the handling of new social risks and the integration of immigrants. It will also provide a comprehensive mapping of radical and populist political actors, their appeals and their electoral performance across European countries. Furthermore, the research will conduct a comprehensive analysis of the impact welfare state performance; exposure of countries to economic globalization; immigration and the extent of benefits brought by European integration have on support for radical populist parties, national political systems and European integration. It will rely on multilevel methods to assess the impact of macro-level variables on variations in individual-level behavior and attitudes across European countries.
Year 2011
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14 Project

The Place of Race in Conservative and Far-right Movements

Authors Kathleen M. Blee, Elizabeth A. Yates
Year 2015
Journal Name Sociology of Race and Ethnicity
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19 Journal Article

Going to extremes: Politics after financial crises, 1870–2014

Authors Manuel Funke, Moritz Schularick, Christoph Trebesch
Year 2016
Journal Name European Economic Review
Citations (WoS) 35
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23 Journal Article

Gender and family rhetoric on the German far right

Authors Katrine Fangen, Lisanne Lichtenberg
Year 2021
Journal Name Patterns of Prejudice
Citations (WoS) 12
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29 Journal Article

The radical right and the end of Swedish exceptionalism

Authors Jens Rydgren, Sara van der Meiden
Year 2018
Journal Name European Political Science
Citations (WoS) 2
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34 Journal Article

Heritage Mobilisation as Radical Politics in a Left-Wing Social Movement

Authors Carolin Muller, Carolin Müller
Year 2023
Journal Name Journal of Intercultural Studies
Citations (WoS) 1
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36 Journal Article

"Deplorable" Satire Alt-Right Memes, White Genocide Tweets, and Redpilling Normies

Authors Viveca S. Greene
Year 2019
Journal Name STUDIES IN AMERICAN HUMOR
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37 Journal Article

THE FRENCH RESISTANCE AND THE JEWS

Authors D CORDIER
Year 1993
Journal Name ANNALES-ECONOMIES SOCIETES CIVILISATIONS
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39 Journal Article

Contemporary Far-Right Racist Populism in Europe

Authors Ulrike M. Vieten, Scott Poynting
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Intercultural Studies
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50 Journal Article

Cities’ Policies: the Work of European Cities to Counter Muslim Radicalisation

Authors Anja van Heelsum, Floris Vermeulen
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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53 Journal Article

Appropriating the 'Legitimate': Far-Right Discourses on Ecology

Description
Modern societies have increasingly thematised themselves with ecological issues as their basic problems. However, the ‘legitimacy’ publicly ascribed to ecology renders its appropriation possible by groups widely viewed as ‘illegitimate’, enabling such actors to attract not only their core audience, but also a moderate wider public. This project analyses such appropriation, i.e. both the assessment of as well as the potential for self-legitimisation via ecological topics. This is done via an analysis of the politically relevant case of increasingly popular far-right populist and radical parties, and looser groups of organised intellectuals in Austria, Germany and Switzerland between 2001 and 2011. Existing research on these actors has investigated, e.g., their stance on immigration but similarly extensive research into their public discourses on ecology does not exist. Little is known about ‘how’ and ‘why’ some far-right actors reject ecological issues, while others appropriate the protection of nature. Through triangulating quantitative corpus-linguistics (direct comparison of the investigated discourses on ecology), quantitative appropriation analysis (mapping assessments of and potential self-legitimation via ecology) and qualitative discourse analysis (how ecology is performed in detail), I ask: Which topics characterise far-right discourses on ecology? How are these performances affected as soon as these actors address a moderate wider public? (How) Do these actors draw on traditional right-wing narratives about the humans-and-nature relationship? Successful appropriation of the ‘legitimate‘ topic of ecology might enable these actors to legitimise their core topics, attract a moderate wider public and transvalue (liberal-)democratic values. Thus, the project provides, for the first time and in a historical and comparative perspective, an analysis of such attempts, enabling a better understanding of increasingly successful far-right populists and radicals.
Year 2013
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62 Project

Migrating Extremists

Authors Felix Roesel, Christian Ochsner
Year 2020
Journal Name The Economic Journal
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65 Journal Article

Focalizing new-Fascism: Right politics and integralisms in contemporary Italy

Authors Luiza Bialasiewicz, Sabrina Stallone
Year 2019
Journal Name Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space
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66 Journal Article

‘Racism: From the Labour Movement to the Far-Right’

Authors Minna Liinpää, Satnam Virdee, Neil Davidson, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
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68 Journal Article

Non-Territorial Autonomy as Minority Protection in Europe: An Intellectual and Political History of a Travelling Idea, 1850-2000

Description
Over the past 150 years, non-territorial autonomy has been one of three models for dealing with linguistic or ethnic minorities within several European states. Compared with the other two, i.e. the recognition of minority rights as individual rights and territorial self-rule, non-territorial autonomy has received little attention. This project proposes to write the first history of non-territorial autonomy as an applied policy tool in minority protection and as an intellectual concept with a chequered history across Europe. Intellectuals, politicians, and legal scholars across the political spectrum from the far left to the far right supported this idea, although they were aware of the risks of strengthening national differences by promoting such a collective approach to minority protection. The project explores how this idea of granting cultural rights to a national group as a corporate body within a state, as a means of integrating diverse nationalities, travelled and transformed throughout the Habsburg Empire from 1850 to the present. We propose to 1) trace the development/circulation of theoretical conceptions and political applications of non-territorial autonomy within the Habsburg Empire, by mapping the networks of scholars as well as politicians who advocated for it; 2) explain the continuities in the development of the idea, and its manifestations in policies adopted by interwar Central and Eastern European nation states, where communists, socialists, liberals and fascists alike were able to translate elements of non-territorial autonomy into their ideologies and programs; 3) analyse the treatment of non-territorial autonomy, which was advocated by minority lobby groups, in international minority protection in the 20th century despite strong opposition to practices based on it by international organisations. We rely on a mixture of historiographical methods developed in nationalism studies to analyse the idea’s translation in entangled transnational spaces.
Year 2018
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70 Project

Editorial: special issue on gender and the far right

Authors Katrine Fangen, Inger Skjelsbæk
Year 2020
Journal Name Politics, Religion & Ideology
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72 Journal Article

Right Extremist Votes and the Presence of Foreigners: An Analysis of the 1994 Elections in Amsterdam

Authors Sjoerd De Vos, Rinus Deurloo
Year 1999
Journal Name Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie
Citations (WoS) 9
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78 Journal Article

Contact versus Exposure: Refugee Presence and Voting for the Far Right

Authors Andreas Steinmayr
Year 2021
Journal Name The Review of Economics and Statistics
Citations (WoS) 112
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80 Journal Article

The right click! An analysis of the far right in Norway on social media

Authors Birgitte Prangerod Haanshuus, Anders Ravik Jupskas
Year 2017
Journal Name Tidsskrift for samfunnsforskning
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83 Journal Article

A puzzling effect of unemployment: A reply to Dülmer and Klein

Authors MARCEL LUBBERS, PEER SCHEEPERS
Year 2005
Journal Name European Journal of Political Research
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93 Journal Article

The Far-right as a challenge for political education in Germany

Authors Gustavo Robles
Year 2019
Journal Name APOSTA-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES
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96 Journal Article

Dilemmas of representation and solidarity: Trade unions and extreme right-wing parties

Principal investigator Anders Neergaard (REMESO Project Leader)
Description
Research on trade unions has identified the crises and challenges trade unions face, not only in relation to employers and the state, but also regarding how to keep the trade union and workers together. One particular challenge is how to build solidarity in a context in which the number of migrant workers is increasing and working class support for anti-immigrant extreme right parties is growing. The research question framing this proposal is how an important organisation for Swedish industrial relations negotiate what seems to be a fundamental contradiction among its members. The aim is to analyse the strategies and actions taken by trade unions in relation to migrant workers, ethnic diversity and members and activists displaying support for extreme right parties. The theoretical framework is drawn from labour studies and industrial relations research along with migration and ethnic studies, supplemented with gender studies.. Methodologically, the project is an ethnographic study of five blue collar trade unions and Landsorganisationen, employing semi-structured interviews and participant observation, complemented with document analysis.
Year 2017
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98 Project
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