Read more
From Boogaloo Bois and Rassemblement National, to Nordic Resistance Movement and Forza Nuova, majoritarian ethnonational movements and extreme-right politics are growing in different national contexts and continue to challenge democratic norms around the globe.
This collection brings together research by prominent senior scholars and up-and-coming junior researchers to present an up-to-date examination of the right's resurgence in Europe and North America. Its chapters focus on movement-party intersections, social media, identity work, extremism, anti-immigration rhetoric, and theoretical approaches and methodologies to studying the right.
Bringing together several studies originally presented as plenary talks at the annual
Mobilization-SDSU conferences, the editors combine their expertise and draw upon their scholarly networks to offer a collection of research that will be significant for years to come. Each chapter is an important contribution that deepens our knowledge of right-wing contentious politics. They will be widely used by both sociologists and political scientists who are interested in current global trend of a resurgent and authoritarian right.
List of contents
Chapter 1. The Twenty-First Century Radical Right. A Perfect Storm? Chapter 2. A Constellation Approach to Understanding Extremist White Supremacy Chapter 3. Under the MAGA Movement's Big-Umbrella Chapter 4. Active Abeyance, Political Opportunities, and the "New" White Supremacy Chapter 5. U.S. and Canadian Evangelicals: The Institutional Infrastructure of Contemporary Political Influence Chapter 6. Identity and Stigma in Radical-Right Mobilization: The Case of Canada's La Meuta. Chapter 7. How White-Supremacists Framed the Elections of Obama and Trump Chapter 8. The Organization and Strategies of Far-Right Movement Parties Chapter 9. Britain First and the Dynamics of Far-Right Activism on Facebook Chapter 10. Territorial Stigmatization and Far Right's Mobilization in Sweden Chapter 11. Undoing Violence in the Manosphere: Incels' Disengagement from Extremism in Digital Free Spaces
About the author
Hank Johnston is Professor of Sociology at San Diego State University, USA.
Rory McVeigh is Professor of Sociology at the University of Notre Dame, USA.
Ziad Munson is Associate Professor of Sociology at Lehigh University, USA.