Based on the history of radical right parties in Western Europe in the last thirty years, this article describes the recent rise of the radical right in Germany and the reasons for it, in relation to the situation in Eastern Europe. According to the author, the far right didn’t follow the same path in Eastern and Western Europe. However, the two models connect in Germany where a more pronounced political radicalism can be observed in the East than in the West. This shows that the specific evolutions in Eastern Europe have had an influence on German far right. This observation is made visible through the explanation of certain concepts and cartography, and is explained looking at extremist ideology, electoral volatility in a context where parties are under-institutionalized, and radical right street mobilization in Eastern Germany and Eastern Europe
© 2001-2024 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados