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For over 20 years, school interventions involving former right-wing extremists have been popular in Germany. In practice, they are advertised and conducted as both civic education and extremism prevention. This book uses an evidence-based and interdisciplinary approach to examine the potentials and challenges of this format. It provides a thematic embedding of German application, a comprehensive review of attributed impact assumptions and the state of related research. Furthermore, this research offers highly valuable, unique and comprehensive insights based on empirical evidence. It thus contributes to a better understanding of the format and its complexity. Overall, the findings give no clear indication that the involvement of former right-wing extremists in schools initiate civic education processes or prevent political extremism. Rather, the investigation found fundamental needs for additional research, modification, and sensitization. In this vein, this book makes a pioneer contribution to quality assurance and evaluation research in civic education and extremism prevention. About the author Dr. Antje Gansewig worked in the fields of political extremism, crime prevention and civic education for several institutions over the last 15 years (e.g., National Center for Crime Prevention, Federal Agency for Civic Education). Currently, she is a researcher at the University of Oldenburg, Institute of Social Sciences, Department of Civic Education.
In: Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology Working Papers no. 210
In the past, far-right aggression predominantly focused on national settings and street terror against minorities; today, however, it is increasingly embedded in global networks and acts within a strategic framework aimed at revolution, targeting the liberal order as such. Ideologically combining antisemitism, racism, and anti-feminism/anti-LGBTQI, adherents of this movement see modern societies as degenerate and weak, with the only solution being a violent collapse that they attempt to accelerate with their actions. The terrorist who attacked the synagogue and a kebab shop in Halle, Germany, in October 2019 clearly identified with this transnational community and situated his act as a continuation of a series of attacks inspired by white supremacy in the past decade. The common term 'lone wolf' for these kinds of terrorists is in that sense a misnomer, as they are embedded in digital 'wolf packs'. Although this movement is highly decentralized and heterogeneous, there are interactive processes that connect and shape the online milieu of extremists into more than the sum of its parts, forming a structure which facilitates a certain degree of cohesion, strategic agency, and learning. This paper uses the model of collective learning outside formal organizations to analyze how the revolutionary accelerationist right as a community of practice engages in generating collective identities and knowledge that are used in the service of their acts of death and destruction.
In: Cass series on political violence
An oft-neglected subject, right-wing women are an important component in understanding the many racist, fascist, and anti-feminist movements of the 20th century. Providing original research on an array of right-wing groups around the world, the contributors paint a disturbing and complicated portrait of the women involved in these movements. From Mussolini supporters to Klanswomen, this collection provides an eye-opening look at extremist women
In: Cass series on political violence
Revising the 1997 first edition, this study covers events that occurred in Oldham and Bradford after the year 2000.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Right-Wing Extremism: In Search of a Definition -- 3 Canada: Right-Wing Extremism in the Peaceable Kingdom -- 4 Right-Wing Extremism in the United States -- 5 The Extreme Right in the United Kingdom and France -- 6 Contemporary Right-Wing Extremism in Germany -- 7 The Incomplete Revolutions: The Rise of Extremism in East-Central Europe and the Former Soviet Union -- 8 Russia: The Land Inbetween -- 9 Poland: The Vanguard of Change -- 10 Hungary: From "Goulash Communism" to Pluralistic Democracy -- 11 The Internationalization of the Extreme Right -- 12 Conclusions -- Appendix-List of Research Interviews -- Selected Bibliography -- About the Book and Editors -- About the Contributors -- Index
In: Gender studies
Frontmatter --Contents --Right-Wing Populism and Gender: A Preliminary Cartography of an Emergent Field of Research --Authoritarian Right-Wing Populism as Masculinist Identity Politics. The Role of Affects --Why Gender and Sexuality are both Trivial and Pivotal in Populist Radical Right Politics --Sexual Politics from the Right. Attacks on Gender, Sexual Diversity, and Sex Education --Post-Socialist Conditions and the Orbán Government's Gender Politics between 2010 and 2019 in Hungary --Man, Woman, Family. Gender and the Limited Modernization of Right-Wing Extremism in Austria --Sexual Politics as a Tool to "Un-Demonize" Right-Wing Discourses in France --Identitarian Gays and Threatening Queers, Or: How the Far Right Constructs New Chains of Equivalence --Why Are Women Attracted to Right-Wing Populism? Sexual Exceptionalism, Emancipation Fatigue, and New Maternalism --Populist Mobilizations in Re-Traditionalized Society: Anti-Gender Campaigning in Slovenia --'You're Fired!' Retrotopian Desire and Right-Wing Class Politics --The Alternative Right, Masculinities, and Ordinary Affect --Angry Women: Poland's Black Protests as 'Populist Feminism' --Intersectionality Strikes Back: Right-Wing Patterns of En-Gendering and Feminist Contestations in the Americas --Acknowledgements --List of image sources --Authors
This encyclopedia covers American right-wing extremist groups and extremism from the 1930s to the present day, including neo-Nazis, the Ku Klux Klan, and various anti-government organizations.
Para-Platforms' investigates the social, spatial, and material reality of right-wing populism. Three case studies--presented in a symposium organized by Markus Miessen at the Gothenburg Design Festival in November 2017--form the core of this collection of essays: journalist Hannes Grassegger on Trump and Brexit; architectural theorist Stephan Trüby on spaces of right-wing extremism in Germany; and Christina Varvia on Forensic Architecture's investigation of the murder of Halit Yozgat, a young German man of Turkish descent, at the hands of a far-right group in 2006. The presentations are reproduced along with the ensuing conversations with Miessen and the audience members. An essay by design scholar Mahmoud Keshavarz opening the book discusses the capacity of design to create conditions for certain politics to occur. Among the other theoretical, artistic, and historical contributions in the reader, editor Zoë Ritts interviews artist Wolfgang Tillmans regarding his pro-EU poster series, the ongoing project truth study centre, and guest-edited volume What Is Different? The volume concludes with a comic by artist Liam Gillick animating a block of granite--culled from the Swedish quarry responsible for extracting the red granite intended for the Third Reich's architectural ambitions--as the messiah of spatial and material politics