While exclusionary national identities are widespread among Europeans, relatively few people vote for the far right in most countries. Thus, an exclusionary identity in many cases does not lead to voting for the most nativist types of parties. We explain this empirical puzzle by showing that these identities need to be activated to become behaviourally relevant. To this end, we analyse longitudinal comparative data of over 135,000 individuals across more than 26 years and 26 countries combining different survey programmes and manifesto data. We use latent class analysis to show that over half of respondents hold exclusionary conceptions of nationhood. Moreover, this type of national identity predicts voting far right. Using multi-level mode...
This article focuses on the prevalence of anti-immigration attitudes among the far-right electorate....
This paper examines the consequences of the far-right in shaping foreign-born immigrants’ satisfacti...
Far-right parties have emerged in many countries, and many are advocates for limiting future numbers...
As globalisation makes national boundaries both permeable and contested, conflicts over national ide...
The rise of far-right parties represents one of the main challenges for European democracies. Previo...
We argue theoretically and demonstrate empirically that to understand the electoral fortunes of far-...
As globalisation makes national boundaries both permeable and contested, conflicts over national ide...
This article investigates three explanations for electoral support for the far right – ‘cultural bac...
In a majority of Western European countries, the vote share cast for radical right-wing populist par...
This thesis analyzes national identity maintenance by looking at the communications of three far rig...
This paper examines the intriguing possibility that higher national identification commonly found am...
The analysis builds on previous research exploring the impact of far-right support on citizenship po...
Under what conditions do individuals opt out of the political mainstream and vote for the far-right?...
Contains fulltext : 168395.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Voting for radi...
The analysis builds on previous research exploring the impact of far-right support on citizenship po...
This article focuses on the prevalence of anti-immigration attitudes among the far-right electorate....
This paper examines the consequences of the far-right in shaping foreign-born immigrants’ satisfacti...
Far-right parties have emerged in many countries, and many are advocates for limiting future numbers...
As globalisation makes national boundaries both permeable and contested, conflicts over national ide...
The rise of far-right parties represents one of the main challenges for European democracies. Previo...
We argue theoretically and demonstrate empirically that to understand the electoral fortunes of far-...
As globalisation makes national boundaries both permeable and contested, conflicts over national ide...
This article investigates three explanations for electoral support for the far right – ‘cultural bac...
In a majority of Western European countries, the vote share cast for radical right-wing populist par...
This thesis analyzes national identity maintenance by looking at the communications of three far rig...
This paper examines the intriguing possibility that higher national identification commonly found am...
The analysis builds on previous research exploring the impact of far-right support on citizenship po...
Under what conditions do individuals opt out of the political mainstream and vote for the far-right?...
Contains fulltext : 168395.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Voting for radi...
The analysis builds on previous research exploring the impact of far-right support on citizenship po...
This article focuses on the prevalence of anti-immigration attitudes among the far-right electorate....
This paper examines the consequences of the far-right in shaping foreign-born immigrants’ satisfacti...
Far-right parties have emerged in many countries, and many are advocates for limiting future numbers...