2018
DOI: 10.1080/09546553.2018.1445888
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Right-wing Terrorism and Militancy in the Nordic Countries: A Comparative Case Study

Abstract: Combining new quantitative and qualitative data, this article first describes and compares the evolution of right-wing terrorism and militancy in the Nordic countries between 1990 and 2015. Having established that Sweden has experienced considerably more right-wing terrorism and militancy than the other Nordic countries have, the article then seeks to account for Sweden's outlier position. In doing so, the article draws on three concepts proposed by social movement research: organizational resources, political… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Another reason this particularly powerful set of intertextual memes managed to travel is that they encapsulate growing and relatively mainstream anti-establishment sentiments among the general Swedish public (Ravndal 2018) and prey on the general climate of political despondency that is percolating through liberal democracies across the world. The idea at the core of the Finspång memes, that political elites are lying to the people, is increasingly widespread in discussion forums and the web of far-right “news” sites described above.…”
Section: The Cross-over Between Neo-nazi and Alt-right Discourse: Thementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another reason this particularly powerful set of intertextual memes managed to travel is that they encapsulate growing and relatively mainstream anti-establishment sentiments among the general Swedish public (Ravndal 2018) and prey on the general climate of political despondency that is percolating through liberal democracies across the world. The idea at the core of the Finspång memes, that political elites are lying to the people, is increasingly widespread in discussion forums and the web of far-right “news” sites described above.…”
Section: The Cross-over Between Neo-nazi and Alt-right Discourse: Thementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many NRM members, however, continue their activities in other, more recently established organisations. 4 Despite the fact that far-right extremism has not been as widespread in Finland as in the other Nordic Countries (see Ravndal, 2018), several politicians and authorities, including the Finnish Security Intelligence Service (2020), have expressed concerns that the situation may not remain that way. For the first time, the Security and Intelligence Service (SUPO) has now explicitly stated in its national security review that the danger of right-wing extremism and terrorism has grown in western countries, including Finland (Finnish Security Intelligence Service, 2020).…”
Section: Violent Extremism In Finlandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although some attention has been accorded to issues such as charisma and leaders (McDonnell 2016;Campus 2017), we still lack a comprehensive understanding of far-right intellectuals, writers and opinion leaders, and of the mechanism by which different types of groups identify and train their cadres or militants (Jupskås 2015;Göpffarth 2018). At present, considerable gaps remain concerning the new forms of collective action by, for example, PEGIDA, the Identitarians and other grassroots groups (Busher 2015;Virchow 2016;Ravndal 2018), as well as the transmission of practices and ideas across these groups, the media and more established far-right parties (Castelli Gattinara and Froio 2018a).…”
Section: Electoralismmentioning
confidence: 99%