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“Europe A Nation” or “Common Market Suicide”? Fascism, European entanglement and the ideology of Britain’s extreme right, 1945-75
Journal article   Peer reviewed

“Europe A Nation” or “Common Market Suicide”? Fascism, European entanglement and the ideology of Britain’s extreme right, 1945-75

L. LeCras
Australian Journal of Politics & History, Vol.64(3), pp.436-449
2018
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Abstract

Recent attempts to analyze the outcome of the 2016 Brexit referendum have prompted a renewed interest in the history of fascism, nationalism and right‐wing Euroscepticism in British politics. By considering the ideology and political experiences of two key figures in the post‐war movement, this article examines the distinctive and diverging approaches of extreme right‐wing parties to the European issue in the decades after the Second World War. It further presents an explanation for why, despite their forthright engagement with the issue of European integration, extreme right parties remained a marginal voice in the debate leading up to Britain’s entry into Europe in 1975.

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Citation topics
10 Arts & Humanities
10.144 Modern History
10.144.1725 British Social Change
Web Of Science research areas
History
Political Science
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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