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0 reviews(Ebook) Extreme Right Activists in Europe Through the Magnifying Glass 1st Edition by Pieter Klandermans, Nonna Mayer - Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9780203004395 ,0203004396
Full download (Ebook) Extreme Right Activists in Europe Through the Magnifying Glass 1st Edition after payment

Product details:
ISBN 10: 0203004396
ISBN 13: 9780203004395
Author: Pieter Klandermans, Nonna Mayer
(Ebook) Extreme Right Activists in Europe Through the Magnifying Glass 1st Edition Table of contents:
Part I The environment
1 Right-wing extremism as a social movement
Extreme right activists
Traditional approaches to right-wing extremism
Right-wing extremism as a social movement
Motives to participate
Organizations and context
Continuity
Notes
2 Links with the past
Italy: from fascism to post-fascism?
France: the double legacy of the extreme right
Flanders: the Flemish nationalism matrix
The Netherlands: the logic of splinter parties
Germany: a cyclical trajectory
Notes
3 Context, alliances and conflict
Electoral rules
Political opportunities
Legal rights and prohibitions
Alliances and conflicts
The anti-RWE movements
Notes
4 Political demand and supply
Political demand: RWE mobilization potential
Political supply: RWE movements' resources
Electoral strength
Party strength
Leadership
Becoming a right-wing activist
Notes
5 Writing life-histories: Interviewing extreme right-wing activists
Sampling extreme right activists
Flanders
The Netherlands
Germany
Italy
France
Movement v. party
The quality of our sample
The interviews
Processing the data
Transcription
Code book
Summarizing and coding
Some afterthoughts
Notes
Part II The interviewees
6 Italy: The offspring of fascism
A historical reminder
From fascism to the MSI
From MSI to AN
MS-FT and MFL
Recent developments
Becoming post-fascist activists in an anti-fascist society
Fascism as a positive heritage
Fascism as discrimination
Managing post-fascist identity in an anti-fascist society
Experiencing discrimination
Coping with discrimination
Social creativity
Social competition
Social support and feeling of belonging
Discussion and conclusion
7 France: A two-centuries-old galaxy
What sets them apart: tracing FN genealogy from far right political groups to newcomers
The pre-war traditional extreme right
Revolutionary and radical right wingers
Monarchist and Catholic right wing
The anti-communist right
The French Algerian networks
Politics as a violent phenomenon
Nostalgia as founder of a common myth
The independent right wing
The radicalization of the Gaullists
The new generation: the unaffiliated
A left-wing cultural trend
Lack of any real political roots: the neither–nor syndrome
Internal divisions and party splits
The class cleavage: working class and gentry
Ideological divisions
Divisions in the sphere of action
So what holds it all together?
Party strategy: cultivate marginal identities
Party strategy: provide meaning and a refuge
Conclusion: the acquisition of a political RWE culture
Notes
8 Extreme right-wing activism in the Flemish part of Belgium: Manifestation of racism or nationalism?
Why and how does one become an activist? Exploring activism's trajectories and motives
The process of becoming active
Activism caused by the social environment
The role of parents
Growing up in a radical, Flemish-national family
Growing up in a moderate, Flemish-national family
The role of a youth movement and friends
The role of a youth movement or youth centre
The role of friends
Activism resulting from an event
Respondents' political views
Ethnic nationalism as an ideological foundation
The resulting attitude towards foreigners
Ethically right-wing as a tailpiece
Evaluation of ‘politics' and feelings of deprivation
Summary and discussion
Notes
9 ‘Doing it for Germany': A study of Die Republikaner and Junge Freiheit
Middle-of-the-road Germans
Building up a national conservative potential
Family socialization
German history as a biographical experience
Turning potential into activism
The role of ‘abeyance structures'
The search for a new political home
Core values and ideology: the national community
Conclusion
Notes
10 The Netherlands: Stigmatized outsiders
Constructing the stigma
Acquiring the mark: becoming an extreme right activist
Hans
Piet
Maria
Continuity
Conversion
Compliance
Facing stigmatization
Bearing the mark: being a right-wing activist
Willem
Mark
Paula
Experiencing stigmatization
Some throw the burden off
Conclusion
11 One root, different branches: Identity, injustice and schism
Collective identity and collective action
Collective identity and schism
Collective identity in major v. minor groups
Collective identity and perceived injustice
Analysis of autobiographical accounts
Collective identity in extreme right-wing parties
Similarities between major and minor parties
Peculiarities of the major party
Peculiarities of the minor parties
Perceived injustice in extreme right-wing parties
Similarities between major and minor parties
Peculiarity of the major party
Peculiarities of the minor parties
Summary: levels of political identity after a schism
Conclusion
12 Identity in German right-wing extremism: Levels, functions and processes
Definition and topography of collective identity
A topography of RWE identity
Functions of RWE identity
Processes of RWE identity
(Self-)stereotyping
Conformity
Prejudice
Discrimination
RWE identity as a politicized collective identity
Summary and conclusions
Notes
13 Do right- and left-wing extremists have anything in common?
Theories and hypotheses
French extremists
Authoritarianism and ethnocentrism
Political matters
Italian extremists
Authoritarianism and ethnocentrism
Ideology and attitudes
Anti-system attitudes
Ethnocentric attitudes
Socio-economic conservatism
Social values
Flemish extremists
Motives for active membership
Ideology and attitudes
Values
Politicization
Conclusion
Notes
14 Through the magnifying glass: The world of extreme right activists
Not so extreme
Not so new
Nation first
Coping with stigmatization
Collective identity
The future of right-wing extremism
Limitations and lines for future research
Notes
Appendix 1 Samples
Flanders
The Netherlands
France
Italy
Germany
Appendix 2 Interview scheme
1. Becoming a member:
2. Being a member
3. Staying a member
4. Ideology
5. Identity
6. Demographics
Appendix 3 Code book
1. Processes of socialization
1.1 Interpersonal relations
1.2 Political and ideological socialization
1.3 Social-psychological explanations
2. Critical events
3. Entry to the organization
4. Maintenance of commitment
4.1 Structural integration
4.2 Psychological meaning
5. Exit
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Tags: Pieter Klandermans, Nonna Mayer, Extreme Right Activists, Magnifying Glass