During recent decades, radical right parties have been surging in
popularity in many nations, gaining legislative seats, enjoying the
legitimacy endowed by ministerial office, and striding the
corridors of government power. The popularity of leaders such as Le
Pen, Haider, and Fortuyn has aroused widespread popular concern and
a burgeoning scholarly literature. Despite the interest, little
consensus has emerged about the primary factors driving this
phenomenon. The puzzle is to explain why radical right parties have
advanced in a diverse array of democracies - including in Austria,
Canada, Norway, France, Italy, New Zealand, Switzerland, Israel,
Romania, Russia, and Chile - while failing to make comparable gains
in similar societies elsewhere, such as in Sweden, Britain, and the
United States. This book, first published in 2005, expands our
understanding of support for radical right parties through
presenting an integrated new theory which is then tested
systematically using a wealth of cross-national survey evidence
covering almost forty countries.
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