Overview
Interrogating Emergent Narratives from the Year of Elections
Over the summer, right after the EU Parliament elections, one of the emergent narratives was that the center had held, despite the success of authoritarian populists in the election, and that the joining of forces in France could provide an alternative to Marine LePen’s party. A few months later, what we see is that in the EU institutions, rather than mainstream partners voting in block to act as a counterbalance to extremist forces, they have now become comrade in arms. After dubious political maneuvering by French president Emmanuel Macron, just this December the French government collapsed, making a new far-right government in the next election even more likely (Macron has just appointed a new prime minister, the fourth PM this year). Similarly, there was momentarily a barrage of commentary about Trump winning by a landslide in the US. Looking at the data once the full results were publicly revealed, it is clear that his victory was in fact not a landslide, especially when viewed from a historical perspective.
Which stories make sense, which need to be more closely examined, or complexified, and which ones we tell ourselves because they make us feel better thus need to be interrogated.
Moving Beyond the Left-Right Paradigm: Understanding this Political Moment through the Lens of Authoritarian Populism
Through the lens of the framework of authoritarian populism, the framing of left vs right is deemphasized, focusing instead on the interplay of the populist and authoritarian playbooks—a dance between rhetorical claims to speak in the name of the people against the elites with anti-democratic practices—deployed in pursuit of nativist and exclusionary goals (economics, foreign policy, and other policy-areas become subordinate to these two orienting objectives). This shift in focus can also help us make sense of the global structures of cooperation or imitation of authoritarian populists, which deploy similar narratives and policies across countries and share financial and other resources despite historical, socioeconomic, and even ideological differences.
In Conversation with Peace Strategist Sanam Naraghi Anderlini, Part Two: Examples of Grassroots Peacebuilding Success
“A compelling example comes from Sierra Leone in the 1990s, during the war between an armed group, the RUF, and a predatory government. Both sides were committing horrific acts against civilians. Even after a peace agreement was signed, the RUF continued to abuse the local population. In response, elderly women from the church decided to march in protest. They didn’t just protest using their identities as older women and the status that comes with being the grandmothers of society; they drew upon deeply indigenous traditions. When they reached the RUF’s barricades, these women bared their bottoms, an act that, in their culture, was a profound dishonor to the men. This action shamed the men into stopping their abuses, ultimately changing the course and ending the war.”
In Conversation with Peace Strategist Sanam Naraghi Anderlini, Part One: The Foundations of Peacebuilding and Bridging Divides
Sanam Naraghi Anderlini’s journey as a peace strategist is deeply rooted in her experiences growing up in Iran, where, at just 11 years old, she witnessed the Iranian Revolution and the upheaval it brought to her family and community. These early experiences of conflict and displacement propelled her to dedicate her life to peacebuilding, advocating for frameworks to prevent similar suffering.
"In my twenties, I realized how painful it is when your own country splits apart or experiences turmoil. This pain is multi-generational; even 40 years later, it still affects us all, including generations that weren’t even born at the time. I was driven by the desire to prevent others from experiencing this kind of trauma. I kept asking myself, how can I stop others from going through what we went through?”
Win Some, Lose Some: Making Sense of Authoritarian Populists’ Wins, Losses, and Shifting Relationships in 2024's Summer of Chaos
Recent elections and political shifts indicate that far-right movements are evolving rather than fading, with a lot of possibilities for a multipronged strategy that can help far-right actors exert complementary roles and align with different audiences. Figures like Trump and JD Vance are strategically aligning with diverse constituencies, reflecting a significant shift in GOP dynamics and broader global realignments. In Europe, the reorganization of far-right parties into three distinct groups—Meloni’s, Orbán’s, and Alternative für Deutschland—demonstrates a strategic division of roles. But we have to remember, that while elections are crucial for accessing power, they are just one of many tools for driving social change.
The Evolving Authoritarian Populist Playbook: Embracing "Intersectional" Othering
The far right is nothing if not strategically intersectional. In articulating the ideas that fuel their rhetoric and politics, authoritarian populists never shy away from connecting issues. Authoritarian populists have realized that instead of treating topics as siloed issue-areas that compete with each other for attention, they can all become part of a composite worldview that makes sense of an uncertain world and proactively pushes forward their vision of what the world ought to be.
A Menu of Possibilities: Farmer’s Protests, Polarization, and the Far Right’s Climate Politics
As the climate crisis becomes more and more dire, the far right has tried–with varying degrees of success—to foster and capitalize on climate change-related frictions (when it hasn’t fabricated those tensions). Their climate narratives and policy proposals, as trivotal to their core ideology, are fluid and often inconsistent, and this flexibility affords them the possibility of deepening divides that can be utilized to the far right’s advantage.
Migration Policy: the Trojan Horse of Authoritarian Practices
Increasingly inhumane migration policy — and the accompanying narratives that justify those policies — can open the door to policies in other arenas that would have previously been decried as illiberal and anti-democratic. They normalize practices such as administrative detention and desensitize us to dehumanization. Once the far right comes to power, others have prepared the public and built the necessary legal or technological infrastructure. These migration policies can become the precursor of what’s to come for all, a harbinger of what can befall anyone deemed inconvenient, whether a citizen or not.
The Children of the Minotaur: Democracy & Belonging at the End of the World
Facing the fierce winds of climate chaos, of growing geopolitical instabilities around the world, of declining trust in democratic institutions, and of pandemic futures replete with bacterial agents and viral thresholds, it is becoming increasingly urgent to revisit conversations about belonging and democracy from less familiar vantage points, and to interrogate the citizen-subject beyond the confines of the humanist liberal world order that usually frames it.
Daring to Dream
And as the year comes to an end and I try to reflect on the months passed, I sometimes wonder if, as I am constantly steeped in research on authoritarian populism, my perspective is too clouded by the negatives. Yet no matter where I look, whether it’s in international news, progressive spaces, or far-right forums, the pervasive sensation I observe is usually a combination of anxiety, fear, and anger. But again, is this new or worse? When has the world been fair? When have we inhabited a planet where all belong?
Authoritarian Practices in the Name of Democracy
Authoritarian populists, on the contrary, appropriate the language of democracy activists and legal scholars, particularly arguments that relate to democracy and the rule of law, to delegitimize others who oppose them and prop themselves as the defenders of democracy, playing the game of courting large swathes of the public who would never have contemplated voting for extremists and are largely pro-democracy. They need to do so because authoritarian populists hold elections, and so, they are more dependent on the manipulation of information and the need to brand themselves as democrats.
The Lines that Whisper Us: Rethinking Agency and Accountability in the Middle East through the More-than-Human
“The world is at war. In the grip of lines and stencilled territories, we enact logics that exceed us, that transgress the categoricity of morally independent actors, and that might offer us a strange bewildering other thing, a line of flight away from this toxic convergence of lines. In such a world, no move is too small: every gesture ripples out into a vast tumble and tangle of things, potentizing this forest with new intelligences, with the soft response that might invite us to consider that solutions may get in the way of transformation, and that the thing to do is dance with the trouble.”
Othering & Belonging 2023 - Berlin
Join us on October 26-27, 2023 in Berlin for a dynamic gathering of changemakers, scholars, and artists committed to building inclusive and democratic futures in Europe, the US, and around the world. Share and learn new ideas and practices to strengthen democracy and belonging —with the urgency this moment requires, and the joy and hope our movements need.
Slow and Mainstream Wins the (Far Right) Race: the mainstreaming of authoritarian populist ideas on migration and climate
If migration is the key topic of modern authoritarian populists, the Spanish far right party has not been an exception in promoting anti-immigrant sentiment. Rhetorically, they have unrelentingly framed unaccompanied minor migrants as criminals in insistent and odious campaigns. Now, for many not on the far right, including some young progressives, this acronym immediately brings up fears rather than compassion or solidarity. This is the frame that dominates, whether the far right is in the room or not. Far-right ideas have become detached from far-right actors.”
On Europeans (not) Talking About Race
“Europe doesn’t talk much about race. Although some have a lot to say about racism in Europe and there are well-established anti-racist organizations across the continent, others easily conclude the conversation with something along the lines of “this is not an issue in this continent,” “it’s not about race, it’s about modern migration,” or, often, “but we are not the US.”
Launching a new community on othering and belonging in Europe with the BMW Foundation Herbert Quandt
Tomorrow, more than 40 civic and philanthropic leaders from across Europe and OBI Director john a. powell are gathering in Portugal for a retreat hosted by the BMW Foundation Herbert Quandt and OBI’s Democracy & Belonging Forum on the topic of racialization and othering in Europe.
Forum Facilitator Vanessa Faloye on holding spaces of conflict to build radical belonging
“We are committed to unlocking the possibilities that exist beyond the story that difficult conversations of conflict, difference, or injustice must be avoided out of fear, won out of righteousness, or bulldozed with aggression. We want to co-create a countercultural movement of people relating to difference, reframing conflict, and practicing bridging and belonging in ways that both ground in and build toward our vision of justice and liberation.”
Unpacking the Far Right’s Gender Politics
“… in matters of gender there are actually many differences within and between far right parties and movements in different parts of the world. The far right often adopts liberal frames when convenient, but across the board we observe a more mixed bag of narratives and policy proposals. “
Enough is Enough: The Psychology Behind Authoritarian Populist Discourse
In recent years, political scientists, psychologists, and commentators have grown increasingly interested in the psychological theories that explain political and social attitudes. Threat perception, the Authoritarian Dynamic, Moral Foundations Theory, and Social Dominance Theory are models that are likely to evolve and improve, but they serve as useful frameworks to understand the current moment and build empathy for those who have a different worldview - wherever you stand.