March 4, 2021
RACIST RAINBOW:
The Complex Role of Racism Within the Radical Right (Mario Peucker, Mar. 4th, 2021, Fair Observer)
We've established what you are, we're just haggling over specifics.Decades of extensive scholarship -- and the lived experiences of those affected -- have emphasized that racism is systemic and interpersonal; it is attitudinal, behavioral and structural; and it can draw on biological social constructs and on cultural or religious markers, actual or perceived. At least one (or many) manifestation of racism is present across all radical-right groups. But what kind of racism?The diversity of radical-right movements and groups is well understood in academia, and there have been numerous attempts to develop typologies that capture divergent groups under the umbrella of right-wing extremism. Exclusivist and anti-egalitarian beliefs are a common denominator, but articulations of racism differ across various radical right groups, movements and ideologies. These nuances are important but often overlooked in public and political debates.Some elements of the radical right, for example, mobilize in particular against Islam, expressing primarily anti-Muslim racism. This applies to what is often referred to as "counter-jihad" movements (a self-attributed and ideologized misnomer in many ways) and the anti-Islam protests that swept across Europe and Australia in the second half of 2010s. Non-white people are usually welcome there as long as they share anti-Islam sentiments. For example, in Australia, where most of my research has taken place, it was also not uncommon to see radical-right protesters at these rallies displaying Aboriginal flags and insisting they were reclaiming Australia from Islam also on behalf of indigenous Australians.These anti-Islam groups and movements differ from white supremacy organizations. For example, one Australian white supremacy group expressed its disagreement with those prominent anti-Islam movements as thus: "We do not believe in multiculturalism minus Islam." Of course, these boundaries are blurry. There have been personal overlaps, and some radical-right groups with explicitly neo-Nazi convictions have strategically used the anti-Muslim movements to recruit more people to their white supremacy and antisemitic agenda.Another example that illustrates the complex, fluid and sometimes contested role that different forms of racism play within the radical right are the Proud Boys in the United States. Founded as a self-described Western chauvinistic boys club by Gavin McInnes in 2016 with an explicit, culturally racist and misogynistic profile, the group quickly adopted the markers of a white supremacist network, despite its chairman, Enrique Tarrio, being himself of Afro-Cuban descent. Infighting between Tarrio and another openly antisemitic and white supremacist leading figure (who reportedly referred to Tarrio as a "token negro") in late 2020 revealed the internal fractions -- all racist, yes, but racist in different ways.Racism as an Indicator of Radical-Right IdeologyWhile people associated with or sympathetic to radical-right movements generally seem to hold racist views, the majority of those with such exclusionary or prejudiced attitudes toward certain ethnic, racial, cultural or religious minorities are not affiliated with right-wing extremism or radicalism. Attitude surveys across the Western world -- from North America, the UK and Europe to Australia -- have shown high rates of anti-Muslim sentiments and prejudice, expressed sometimes (depending on the country and the nature of the survey questions) by a majority of the surveyed population. Some surveys revealed that a substantial proportion of respondents also express biological racist views. According to the results of the European Social Survey a few years ago, 18% in the British sample agreed that "some races or ethnic groups are born less intelligent." Considering the possibility of social desirability effects, we can only speculate as to whether this figure underestimates the true prevalence of biological racism.It is impossible to determine how many of those who hold anti-Muslim or other racist views are affiliated or identify with the radical right -- certainly not all of them and probably only a small portion. This is not to disregard the higher susceptibility among these segments of society to mobilization and recruitment efforts of radical-right groups. The path into the radical right is slippery. A former radical-right activist, Ivan Humble, recalled how he became a member of the English Defence League: "I didn't identify as racist at the time, but I began to zero in on Muslim people in the belief that they were attacking the country I lived in, and that our society was being torn apart as a result. In hindsight, this was such a blinkered view but I couldn't see it."In our recent research in Australia, we identified several factors that may help analyze the questions as to where and when racism becomes an indicator for radical-right ideologies. We conducted in-depth interviews with people who were invited to speak with us about the concerns they had about diversity and immigration in Australia. We found that most of those we interviewed expressed anti-Muslim racism and other forms of cultural racism, but our analysis concluded that only some of them were affiliated with the radical right. In what way did their articulation of racism differ?
Posted by Orrin Judd at March 4, 2021 9:50 AM
