Far-right cooperation: Gender, political networks, and the cordon sanitaire in the European Parliament
Even as the far-right parties of Western Europe have made broad electoral gains, mainstream parties continue to enact a cordon sanitaire, effectively curtailing their legislative impact. Any potential ability of women far-right politicians to cooperate across party lines would open up important poli...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European Union politics 2024-12, Vol.25 (4), p.772-798 |
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description | Even as the far-right parties of Western Europe have made broad electoral gains, mainstream parties continue to enact a cordon sanitaire, effectively curtailing their legislative impact. Any potential ability of women far-right politicians to cooperate across party lines would open up important political opportunities not available for them within the far right. This article seeks to address the following question: are women of the far right able to cooperate with members of other political parties in ways that their men colleagues cannot? Using a network analysis of motion co-authorship across three sessions of the European Parliament, I find that there is a double marginalization of far-right women politicians – as women in far-right politics, and as far-right politicians in the European Parliament – which results in women politicians who lack influence within their parties, and within the European Parliament more broadly. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/14651165241274365 |
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subjects | Authorship Cooperation Gender Legislatures Marginality Political parties Politicians Politics Right wing politics Women and politics |
title | Far-right cooperation: Gender, political networks, and the cordon sanitaire in the European Parliament |
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