1st Edition

The Routledge Handbook of Far-Right Extremism in Europe

Edited By Katherine Kondor, Mark Littler Copyright 2023
338 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

338 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

338 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The Routledge Handbook of Far-Right Extremism in Europe is a timely and important study of the far and extreme right-wing phenomenon across a broad spectrum of European countries, and in relation to a selected list of core areas and topics such as anti-gender, identitarian politics, hooliganism, and protest mobilisation. The handbook deals with the rise and the developments of far-right... Read more
Introduction

Katherine Kondor

PART I – Eastern Europe

1. The Serbian Far Right, Football Hooligans, and Their Instrumentalisation by an Authoritarian Regime: Serbia as Case Study

Jovo Bakić

2. The Far Right in Ukraine

Tamta Gelashvili

3. The Russian Far Right: A Changing Landscape of Spaces of Hate

Mihai Varga

PART II – Central Europe

4. Subnational Politics and Far-right Strength in Germany: The Importance of the East-West Divide

Sabine Volk and Manes Weisskircher

5. The Austrian Far Right: Historical Continuities and the Case of the Ulrichsberg Commemorations

Michael C. Zeller

6. Four Cycles of the Czech Far-right’s Contention

Jan Charvát, Ondřej Slačálek, and Eva Svatoňová

7. Hungary’s Goulash-nationalism: The Reheated Stew of Hungary's Far Right

Katherine Kondor and Rudolf Paksa

PART III – Southern Europe

8. The New Populist Radical Right in Portugal: The Chega Party

Riccardo Marchi

9. The Radicalisation of the Italian Mainstream: Populist Radical Right Parties and Extreme Right-wing Movements in Italy (2012-2022)

Valerio Alfonso Bruno and James F. Downes

10. The Far Right in Greece: A Foretold Story

Vasiliki Tsagkroni

11. The Greek-Cypriot Far-right Space, Its History and ELAM’s trajectory

Giorgos Charalambous

PART IV – Northern Europe

12. The Evolution of the Extreme Right in Norway Since the 1990s

Anders Ravik Jupskås and Tore Bjørgo

13. The Far Right in Sweden

Anders Widfeldt

14. The Shift to the Right in Denmark

Mette Wiggen

PART V – Western Europe

15. The New Horizons of French Extreme Right: Fragmented but Dynamic and Better Socially Embedded

Nicolas LeBourg and Marlène Laruelle

16. The Dutch Identitair Verzet and the European Identitarian Movement: Alone at the Table

Sting Daniels and Yannick Veilleux-Lepage

17. Radical Right-wing Politics on the Island of Ireland

Shaun McDaid and Jim McAuley 

18. The Contemporary UK Far Right and Its Organisational Trajectory Since 2009: Towards a Truly Post-organisational Movement?

William Allchorn

EPILOGUE – Selected Current Issues in the European Far Right

19. ‘America Coughs, and We Catch a Cold’: Mapping the Relationship between the American Far Right and British and European Activism

Paul Jackson

20. Gendering the Far-right Continuum in Europe

Cristian Ov Norocel

21. Misogyny as a Gateway to Far-right Hate: A Quantitative Exploration in Great Britain

Antoinette Huber, Gavin Hart, and Mark Littler

 

Biography

Katherine Kondor is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Postdoctoral Fellow at the Center for Research on Extremism (C-REX) at the University of Oslo and a Visiting Fellow in Media and Illiberalism at Loughborough University. She studies recruitment practices, pathways into far-right organisations, and far-right cultural production, particularly in the Hungarian far right. Katherine has published on the Hungarian far right, online extremism, the use of the digital space in the study of the far right, and audience engagement with media.

Mark Littler is an Associate Professor of Criminology and deputy head of the School of Law and Criminology at Liverpool Hope University. He was previously senior lecturer in Criminology and Security Studies at the University of Huddersfield, and a lecturer in Criminology at the University of Hull. He is a series editor for Routledge Studies in Digital Extremism, an associate editor of Behavioural Science of Terrorism and Political Aggression, and Co-chair of the European Society of Criminology’s Working Group on Terrorism, Extremism, and Radicalization.