
Radical right parties are no longer political challengers on the fringes of party systems; they have become part of the political mainstream across the Western world. This book shows how they have used their political power to reform economic and social policies in Continental Europe, Northern Europe, Eastern Europe, and the USA. In doing so, it argues that the radical right's core ideology of nativism and authoritarianism informs their socio-economic policy preferences. However, diverse welfare state contexts mediate their socio-economic policy impacts along regime-specific lines, leading to variations of trade protectionism, economic nationalism, traditional familialism, labour market dualism, and welfare chauvinism.The radical right has used the diverse policy instruments available within their political-economic arrangements to protect threatened labour market insiders and male breadwinners from decline, while creating a racialized and gendered precariat at the same time. This socio-economic agenda of selective status protection restores horizontal inequalities in terms of gender and ethnicity, without addressing vertical inequalities between the rich and the poor.Combining insights from comparative politics, party politics, comparative political economy, and welfare state research, the book provides novel insights into how the radical right manufactures consent for authoritarian rule by taming the socially corrosive effects of globalised capitalism for key electoral groups, while aiming to exclude the rest from democratic participation.
This book investigates how radical right-wing parties have transitioned from political fringes to mainstream actors capable of reshaping economic and social welfare policies in Europe and the United States. Philip Rathgeb, a scholar in comparative political economy, utilizes a framework that links the radical right's core ideologies of nativism and authoritarianism to specific socio-economic outcomes. He argues that these parties manipulate existing welfare state structures to provide selective protection for specific electoral groups, thereby reinforcing horizontal inequalities while largely ignoring vertical wealth disparities.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the intersection of party politics and comparative political economy. Scholars frequently note the analytical rigor with which the author connects ideological shifts to concrete changes in social policy and labor market regulation.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2024-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192866338
ISBN-13:
9780192866332
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