4.1 Article

Right-wing hegemony and immigration: How the populist far-right achieved hegemony through the immigration debate in Europe

Journal

CURRENT SOCIOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 3, Pages 368-381

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0011392111426192

Keywords

Culturalization of politics; hegemony; immigration; xenophobia/Islamophobia

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It is becoming increasingly clear that the debate on Islam and Muslim immigrants has moved into the center of European political discourse. The increasing volume of publications about the role of Islam in social, cultural and political spheres indicates that Islam is now a major political issue, often associated with the debate on terrorism and security. This article argues that the shift in focus should be understood as the result of a hegemonic shift that goes back to the mid-1980s when the populist far-right intervened in the immigration debate in Europe. The far-right not only presented immigration as a cultural threat to the future of European nations but also succeeded in moving immigration to the center of political discourse. This was done through successive right-wing political interventions that helped establish Muslim immigrants as an incompatible ontological category predicated on culture, and kept the national focus on immigration as an imminent threat to 'our common' achievements.

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