The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks

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Standard

The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks. / Sükösd, Miklós Áron; Trenz, Hans-Jörg.

2017. Abstract from "The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and Divisions", Copenhagen, Denmark.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Harvard

Sükösd, MÁ & Trenz, H-J 2017, 'The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks', "The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and Divisions", Copenhagen, Denmark, 29/11/2017 - 29/11/2017.

APA

Sükösd, M. Á., & Trenz, H-J. (2017). The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks. Abstract from "The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and Divisions", Copenhagen, Denmark.

Vancouver

Sükösd MÁ, Trenz H-J. The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks. 2017. Abstract from "The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and Divisions", Copenhagen, Denmark.

Author

Sükösd, Miklós Áron ; Trenz, Hans-Jörg. / The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks. Abstract from "The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and Divisions", Copenhagen, Denmark.

Bibtex

@conference{127d8afe8ed44a7b9eaf7d95067cd1cf,
title = "The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks",
abstract = "The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and DivisionsHans-J{\"o}rg Trenz and Miklos SukosdThe new populist right has emerged as a political force all over Europe. Populist right-wing political parties and movements draw on symbolic references to traditional nationalism as well as the mobilisation of anti-European sentiments. At the same time, new populist forces move strategically within the European political space where their visions, ideologies and agendas are shared and often converge in the rejection of globalization, migration or human rights. At the same time, different regions of Europe (West vs. East, North vs. South) experience different types of populist politics. In this workshop, we focus on the strategies and ideas of the new populist right in Europe. The question to be addressed is how styles and discourses of political mobilization of the populist right converge and diverge and how these processes can be explained. Speakers in our workshop will discuss populist visions, ideologies and agendas from different angles and from different regions in Western, Eastern and Southern Europe. Our starting point is the relative success of populist right-wing mobilization that occurs simultaneously in several parts of Europe. In the last few years, these new parties became important political players both in national and European and international politics. In several countries, they are among the strongest political forces, or have already formed government. We contend that this success cannot simply be explained as a resurgence of right-wing nationalism, but its profound transformation. The new visions of the extreme right often results from deep divisions and new cleavages within European societies, which seem to be split down the middle. One part of the population has benefitted from globalization and is keen to exploit the cultural and professional experiences it offers. Other parts feel an acute loss of social security and income, but also a cultural and social threat from market liberalization and international migration. It is the sentiments and reactions of the latter group, which are transforming liberal democracies in new ways. The emergence of the populist right ideologies, agendas and mobilization takes place in the process of translating such divisions into shared visions that are often based on antagonistic and reactive values than those promoted by Europeanisation and globalization. These antagonistic reactions include: not open and flexible markets but market protection; not mobility but sedentary lifestyles; not cultural hybridity but bounded community; not universal human rights but popular sovereignty and ethnic identity; not secularisation but religion and traditional legitimation; not patchwork families and gender pluralism, but traditional gender roles – not globalization and Europeanization but nationalism. The structure of the workshop In the first section we focus on elements of a conceptual framework for understanding populist right-wing parties. Here we raise questions regarding several analytical dimensions. What are these parties{\textquoteright} views on immigration and religion (especially vis-a-vis Islam and Christianity)? How populist are they and what kind of populism do they represent? What are their position regarding labour policies—and how do these positions relate to the national political contexts? Do they typically have charismatic leaders, who present a “one wo/man show”? How do they construct gender discourses in the context of nationalism? What is their position regarding national history? What is their geopolitical agenda regarding the EU and Russia, and larger ideological vision for Europe and a new world order? In short, how is their new nationalism different from earlier nationalist ideologies in Europe?The subsequent sections present a comparative approach, exploring the different expressions this important new political movement has found in different European regions. We analyze key populist right-wing parties in a comparative perspective in four regions of Europe: Western, Northern, East/Central and Southern Europe, respectively. The workshop wishes to explore how, despite of similar ideologies and visions, the actual policy agendas of these parties differ significantly in different parts of Europe. We also examine how the new populist right-wing parties collaborate, and how Russia supports the dynamics of their international cooperation.",
author = "S{\"u}k{\"o}sd, {Mikl{\'o}s {\'A}ron} and Hans-J{\"o}rg Trenz",
note = "This workshop was organized by Hans-J{\"o}rg Trenz and Miklos Sukosd in the framework of EURECO (European Research at the University of Copenhagen, eureco.ku.dk) and Eurochallenge (Europe and New Global Challenges, UCPH Excellence Programme for Interdisciplinary Research, eurochallenge.ku.dk). It continues a related public lecture series, “Towards a New Political Right in Europe?” that was held at the University of Copenhagen in fall 2016. https://cemes.ku.dk/events/2016/lecture-series-towards-a-new-political-right-in-europe/summary/; {"}The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and Divisions{"} ; Conference date: 29-11-2017 Through 29-11-2017",
year = "2017",
month = nov,
day = "24",
language = "English",
url = "https://www.eurochallenge.ku.dk/events/research-workshop-november-29-2017/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - The New Right and Europe: Introductory Remarks

AU - Sükösd, Miklós Áron

AU - Trenz, Hans-Jörg

N1 - This workshop was organized by Hans-Jörg Trenz and Miklos Sukosd in the framework of EURECO (European Research at the University of Copenhagen, eureco.ku.dk) and Eurochallenge (Europe and New Global Challenges, UCPH Excellence Programme for Interdisciplinary Research, eurochallenge.ku.dk). It continues a related public lecture series, “Towards a New Political Right in Europe?” that was held at the University of Copenhagen in fall 2016. https://cemes.ku.dk/events/2016/lecture-series-towards-a-new-political-right-in-europe/summary/

PY - 2017/11/24

Y1 - 2017/11/24

N2 - The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and DivisionsHans-Jörg Trenz and Miklos SukosdThe new populist right has emerged as a political force all over Europe. Populist right-wing political parties and movements draw on symbolic references to traditional nationalism as well as the mobilisation of anti-European sentiments. At the same time, new populist forces move strategically within the European political space where their visions, ideologies and agendas are shared and often converge in the rejection of globalization, migration or human rights. At the same time, different regions of Europe (West vs. East, North vs. South) experience different types of populist politics. In this workshop, we focus on the strategies and ideas of the new populist right in Europe. The question to be addressed is how styles and discourses of political mobilization of the populist right converge and diverge and how these processes can be explained. Speakers in our workshop will discuss populist visions, ideologies and agendas from different angles and from different regions in Western, Eastern and Southern Europe. Our starting point is the relative success of populist right-wing mobilization that occurs simultaneously in several parts of Europe. In the last few years, these new parties became important political players both in national and European and international politics. In several countries, they are among the strongest political forces, or have already formed government. We contend that this success cannot simply be explained as a resurgence of right-wing nationalism, but its profound transformation. The new visions of the extreme right often results from deep divisions and new cleavages within European societies, which seem to be split down the middle. One part of the population has benefitted from globalization and is keen to exploit the cultural and professional experiences it offers. Other parts feel an acute loss of social security and income, but also a cultural and social threat from market liberalization and international migration. It is the sentiments and reactions of the latter group, which are transforming liberal democracies in new ways. The emergence of the populist right ideologies, agendas and mobilization takes place in the process of translating such divisions into shared visions that are often based on antagonistic and reactive values than those promoted by Europeanisation and globalization. These antagonistic reactions include: not open and flexible markets but market protection; not mobility but sedentary lifestyles; not cultural hybridity but bounded community; not universal human rights but popular sovereignty and ethnic identity; not secularisation but religion and traditional legitimation; not patchwork families and gender pluralism, but traditional gender roles – not globalization and Europeanization but nationalism. The structure of the workshop In the first section we focus on elements of a conceptual framework for understanding populist right-wing parties. Here we raise questions regarding several analytical dimensions. What are these parties’ views on immigration and religion (especially vis-a-vis Islam and Christianity)? How populist are they and what kind of populism do they represent? What are their position regarding labour policies—and how do these positions relate to the national political contexts? Do they typically have charismatic leaders, who present a “one wo/man show”? How do they construct gender discourses in the context of nationalism? What is their position regarding national history? What is their geopolitical agenda regarding the EU and Russia, and larger ideological vision for Europe and a new world order? In short, how is their new nationalism different from earlier nationalist ideologies in Europe?The subsequent sections present a comparative approach, exploring the different expressions this important new political movement has found in different European regions. We analyze key populist right-wing parties in a comparative perspective in four regions of Europe: Western, Northern, East/Central and Southern Europe, respectively. The workshop wishes to explore how, despite of similar ideologies and visions, the actual policy agendas of these parties differ significantly in different parts of Europe. We also examine how the new populist right-wing parties collaborate, and how Russia supports the dynamics of their international cooperation.

AB - The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and DivisionsHans-Jörg Trenz and Miklos SukosdThe new populist right has emerged as a political force all over Europe. Populist right-wing political parties and movements draw on symbolic references to traditional nationalism as well as the mobilisation of anti-European sentiments. At the same time, new populist forces move strategically within the European political space where their visions, ideologies and agendas are shared and often converge in the rejection of globalization, migration or human rights. At the same time, different regions of Europe (West vs. East, North vs. South) experience different types of populist politics. In this workshop, we focus on the strategies and ideas of the new populist right in Europe. The question to be addressed is how styles and discourses of political mobilization of the populist right converge and diverge and how these processes can be explained. Speakers in our workshop will discuss populist visions, ideologies and agendas from different angles and from different regions in Western, Eastern and Southern Europe. Our starting point is the relative success of populist right-wing mobilization that occurs simultaneously in several parts of Europe. In the last few years, these new parties became important political players both in national and European and international politics. In several countries, they are among the strongest political forces, or have already formed government. We contend that this success cannot simply be explained as a resurgence of right-wing nationalism, but its profound transformation. The new visions of the extreme right often results from deep divisions and new cleavages within European societies, which seem to be split down the middle. One part of the population has benefitted from globalization and is keen to exploit the cultural and professional experiences it offers. Other parts feel an acute loss of social security and income, but also a cultural and social threat from market liberalization and international migration. It is the sentiments and reactions of the latter group, which are transforming liberal democracies in new ways. The emergence of the populist right ideologies, agendas and mobilization takes place in the process of translating such divisions into shared visions that are often based on antagonistic and reactive values than those promoted by Europeanisation and globalization. These antagonistic reactions include: not open and flexible markets but market protection; not mobility but sedentary lifestyles; not cultural hybridity but bounded community; not universal human rights but popular sovereignty and ethnic identity; not secularisation but religion and traditional legitimation; not patchwork families and gender pluralism, but traditional gender roles – not globalization and Europeanization but nationalism. The structure of the workshop In the first section we focus on elements of a conceptual framework for understanding populist right-wing parties. Here we raise questions regarding several analytical dimensions. What are these parties’ views on immigration and religion (especially vis-a-vis Islam and Christianity)? How populist are they and what kind of populism do they represent? What are their position regarding labour policies—and how do these positions relate to the national political contexts? Do they typically have charismatic leaders, who present a “one wo/man show”? How do they construct gender discourses in the context of nationalism? What is their position regarding national history? What is their geopolitical agenda regarding the EU and Russia, and larger ideological vision for Europe and a new world order? In short, how is their new nationalism different from earlier nationalist ideologies in Europe?The subsequent sections present a comparative approach, exploring the different expressions this important new political movement has found in different European regions. We analyze key populist right-wing parties in a comparative perspective in four regions of Europe: Western, Northern, East/Central and Southern Europe, respectively. The workshop wishes to explore how, despite of similar ideologies and visions, the actual policy agendas of these parties differ significantly in different parts of Europe. We also examine how the new populist right-wing parties collaborate, and how Russia supports the dynamics of their international cooperation.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - "The New Populist Right and Europe: Visions and Divisions"

Y2 - 29 November 2017 through 29 November 2017

ER -

ID: 226784399