Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
This book analyses the rise in xenophobia, racism, and radical right political parties, movements, and violent groups over recent years. The author provides a summary of the current state of international and interdisciplinary research on the multilevel explanations of right-wing radical thought, comparing similarities and differences across Europe and the United States. By integrating findings from psychology, history, social and life sciences, he proposes a biopsychosociological model of the conditions, causes, catalysts, and triggers of phenomena of the radical right across the world. Following a ‘demand’ and ‘supply’ analysis, Wahl explores the interaction of evolutionary emotional mechanisms and socialization processes with various environmental conditions, and consequent manifestations of radical right groups, to identify possibilities to slow down the rise and effects of the radical right.
Right-wing extremists. --- Far-right extremists --- Radicals --- Political sociology. --- Comparative politics. --- Personality. --- Social psychology. --- Political Sociology. --- Comparative Politics. --- Personality and Social Psychology. --- Mass psychology --- Psychology, Social --- Human ecology --- Psychology --- Social groups --- Sociology --- Personal identity --- Personality psychology --- Personality theory --- Personality traits --- Personology --- Traits, Personality --- Individuality --- Persons --- Self --- Temperament --- Comparative political systems --- Comparative politics --- Government, Comparative --- Political systems, Comparative --- Political science --- Mass political behavior --- Political behavior --- Sociological aspects
Choose an application
Focusing on the rising support for the populist right in Eastern Europe, this book examines how anger and resentment towards minorities is being utilized in politics. Bustikova details the process by which the acquisition of political power and demand for rights by ascendant minority groups precipitates a backlash of mobilization from the radical right. However, this book also argues that prejudice against minorities is not a sentiment exclusive to right-wing voters and is not the root cause of increasing support for the radical right. Rather, this study reveals variation in how minorities are accommodated by the government and explains the electoral successes and failures of radical right parties. By examining the capitalization on these feelings of discontent towards politically assertive minorities and with the governmental policies that yield to their demands, Bustikova exposes volatile, zeitgeist-dependent conditions under which once fringe right-wing parties have risen to prominent but precarious positions of power.
RIGHT-WING EXTREMISTS--EUROPE, EASTERN --- MINORITIES--POLITICAL ACTIVITY--EUROPE, EASTERN --- EUROPE, EASTERN--POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT --- Right-wing extremists --- Populism --- Political parties --- Elections --- Conservatism --- Fascism --- Racism --- Bias, Racial --- Race bias --- Race prejudice --- Racial bias --- Prejudices --- Anti-racism --- Critical race theory --- Race relations --- Neo-fascism --- Authoritarianism --- Collectivism --- Corporate state --- National socialism --- Synarchism --- Totalitarianism --- Conservativism --- Neo-conservatism --- New Right --- Right (Political science) --- Political science --- Sociology --- Far-right extremists --- Radicals --- Europe, Eastern --- Politics and government. --- Conservatism. --- Elections. --- Fascism. --- Political parties. --- Populism. --- Racism. --- Right-wing extremists. --- Eastern Europe.
Choose an application
"Hate in the Homeland shows how tomorrow’s far-right nationalists are being recruited in surprising places, from college campuses and mixed martial arts gyms to clothing stores, online gaming chat rooms, and YouTube cooking channels. Instead of focusing on the how and why of far-right radicalization, Miller-Idriss seeks answers in the physical and virtual spaces where hate is cultivated. Where does the far right do its recruiting? When do young people encounter extremist messaging in their everyday lives? Miller-Idriss shows how far-right groups are swelling their ranks and developing their cultural, intellectual, and financial capacities in a variety of mainstream settings. She demonstrates how young people on the margins of our communities are targeted in these settings, and how the path to radicalization is a nuanced process of moving in and out of far-right scenes throughout adolescence and adulthood."-- "Placing space and place at the center of its analysis enables Hate in the Homeland to focus on hate groups and far right extremism not only as static, organized movements but also as flows of youth who move in and out of the periphery and interstitial spaces of far right scenes, rather than only studying youth at the definable or fixed core of far right extremist movements. For many-perhaps even most-far right youth, Miller-Idriss argues that extremist engagement is characterized by a process of moving in and out of far right scenes throughout their adolescence and adulthood in ways that scholars and policymakers have yet to understand. Hate in the Homeland will make a critical intervention into the literature on extremism by showing how youth on the margins are mobilized through flexible engagements in mainstream-style physical and virtual spaces which the far right has actively targeted for this purpose. This approach to far right extremism and radicalization significantly broadens what we know about the far right, and how people engage with it"--
Social problems --- Criminology. Victimology --- Hate --- Right-wing extremists --- White supremacy movements --- #SBIB:309H271 --- #SBIB:324H60 --- #SBIB:321H81 --- Supremacist movements, White --- Supremacy movements, White --- White supremacist movements --- Social movements --- White nationalism --- Skinheads --- Far-right extremists --- Radicals --- Hatred --- Aversion --- Political aspects --- Social aspects --- Politieke communicatie: toepassingsgebieden --- Politieke socialisatie --- Westerse politieke en sociale theorieën vanaf de 19e eeuw : nationalisme, corporatisme, fascisme, nationaal socialisme, rechtsextremisme, populisme --- Political aspects. --- 14 words. --- Aryan Nations. --- Bring the War Home. --- Cas Mudde. --- David Lane. --- David Myatt. --- Great Replacement. --- Hitler. --- Kathleen Belew. --- PewDiePie. --- Southern Poverty Law Center. --- The Far Right Today. --- The White Power Movement and Paramilitary America. --- alt right. --- alt-right. --- anti-Semitism. --- combatting extremism. --- domestic extremism. --- extremist identities. --- fourteen words. --- mainstreaming of extremism. --- modern far right. --- neo-Nazi. --- normalization of extremism. --- online radicalization. --- race war. --- racism. --- violence. --- white nationalism. --- white supremacist extremism. --- white supremacy. --- youth radicalization.
Listing 1 - 3 of 3 |
Sort by
|