Far-right Parties and discourse in Europe : A challenge for our times [document électronique] / Robin Wilson, Auteur ; Paul Hainsworth, Auteur . - Bruxelles : Réseau Européen contre le racisme ENAR, 2012 . - 1 fichier pdf (32 p.). Langues : Anglais ( eng)
Catégories : |
171:329.18 Antifascisme - Lutte contre l'extrême droite 32.019 Propagande / Communication politique / Médias et politique 329.18(4) Extrême droite Europe
|
Index. décimale : |
329.18 Extrême droite, nationalisme, populisme |
Résumé : |
Extraits de "Executive summary":
Overview across the eu
The far right appears to be on the rise throughout Europe.
As it spans its base across the EU, it has influenced conservatives and political parties in government alike.
The discourse of the far right
Far-right parties have three key features: 1) populism, i.e. plain speaking, anti-elitist and anti-establishment; 2)authoritarianism; and 3) ‘nativism’, i.e. the combination of nationalism and xenophobia.
Hostility to immigration
Hostility to islam
Recommendations for contesting the far right
As a result, progressives across Europe need to:
* Propose a cosmopolitan alternative to nationalism and an egalitarian alternative to hierarchy. This entails developing a common project, which unites rather than separates and would include genuinely European political parties and networks as well as a modern New Deal to offer hope and security to all.
* Focus on the local level and engage with local people and their concerns. This is linked to the need to draw upon the resources of civil society and to encourage all people to become more involved in political and civic life.
* Use intercultural dialogue, which recognises the reality of cultural diversity and the associated need for equality, but also the need for a commitment to
universal norms. The goal should be to turn potentially explosive symbolic issues in the arena of ‘identity politics’ into practical problems to be solved. |
Note de contenu : |
Table des matières :
Foreword
Executive summary
introduction
Acknowledgements
Glossary of parties
Chapter 1: success and failure on the far right
Overview
Elections and voters
Définitions
chapter 2: The discourse of the far right
chapter 3: explanations of far-right emergence and success
Context and reasons for far-right success
The role of the media
chapter 4: contesting the far right
chapter 5: some concluding remarks
References
|
Permalink : |
https://bibliotheque.territoires-memoire.be/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_di |
Titre : |
Far-right Parties and discourse in Europe : A challenge for our times |
Type de document : |
document électronique |
Auteurs : |
Robin Wilson, Auteur ; Paul Hainsworth, Auteur |
Editeur : |
Bruxelles : Réseau Européen contre le racisme ENAR |
Année de publication : |
2012 |
Importance : |
1 fichier pdf (32 p.) |
Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
Catégories : |
171:329.18 Antifascisme - Lutte contre l'extrême droite 32.019 Propagande / Communication politique / Médias et politique 329.18(4) Extrême droite Europe
|
Index. décimale : |
329.18 Extrême droite, nationalisme, populisme |
Résumé : |
Extraits de "Executive summary":
Overview across the eu
The far right appears to be on the rise throughout Europe.
As it spans its base across the EU, it has influenced conservatives and political parties in government alike.
The discourse of the far right
Far-right parties have three key features: 1) populism, i.e. plain speaking, anti-elitist and anti-establishment; 2)authoritarianism; and 3) ‘nativism’, i.e. the combination of nationalism and xenophobia.
Hostility to immigration
Hostility to islam
Recommendations for contesting the far right
As a result, progressives across Europe need to:
* Propose a cosmopolitan alternative to nationalism and an egalitarian alternative to hierarchy. This entails developing a common project, which unites rather than separates and would include genuinely European political parties and networks as well as a modern New Deal to offer hope and security to all.
* Focus on the local level and engage with local people and their concerns. This is linked to the need to draw upon the resources of civil society and to encourage all people to become more involved in political and civic life.
* Use intercultural dialogue, which recognises the reality of cultural diversity and the associated need for equality, but also the need for a commitment to
universal norms. The goal should be to turn potentially explosive symbolic issues in the arena of ‘identity politics’ into practical problems to be solved. |
Note de contenu : |
Table des matières :
Foreword
Executive summary
introduction
Acknowledgements
Glossary of parties
Chapter 1: success and failure on the far right
Overview
Elections and voters
Définitions
chapter 2: The discourse of the far right
chapter 3: explanations of far-right emergence and success
Context and reasons for far-right success
The role of the media
chapter 4: contesting the far right
chapter 5: some concluding remarks
References
|
Permalink : |
https://bibliotheque.territoires-memoire.be/pmb/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_di |
| |