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Mari-Liis Jakobson

Dates in Residence
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The radical right is usually defined as anti-pluralist: it values social homogeneity above all else, and in some cases even seeks to punish otherness: for example, by restricting the rights of minorities, people from an immigrant background or LGBT+ people. At the same time, there is a growing trend of seemingly mildening rhetoric towards select minority groups among radical right politicians and parties in many parts of the Western world. Even candidates from minority backgrounds are increasingly to be found in the ranks of such parties. The aim of my visit is to work with the Stanford labs on an experimental survey instrument to see what effect such strategies have on support for the radical right, and whether such shifts in discourse also help to increase support for right-wing politicians among minority voters, or whether these are more likely to win over wavering majority voters. I also hope to develop contacts with researchers there who are exploring similar issues and to plan further cooperation.

Mari-Liis Jakobson is Associate Professor of Political Sociology at the School for Governance, Law and Society, Tallinn University, and Principal Investigator of the starter grant project “Breaking Into the Mainstream While Remaining Radical: Sidestreaming Strategies on the Populist Radical Right “. Her research interests relate to populism, radical right and migration and transnationalism politics and policy. Her work has been published in several internationally recognised peer-reviewed journals, such as European Political Science, Contemporary Politics, Politics and Governance or Comparative Migration Studies. She is also co-editor of Anxieties of Migration and Integration in Turbulent Times (Springer, 2023).

Visiting Scholars Info

Home Institution
Tallinn University
Project Title
Radical Right and the Minority Vote: A Rapprochement in Progress?
DATES IN RESIDENCE
March 2025 - April 2025