Security, Identity, and the Discourse of Conflation in Far-Right Violence

Authors

  • Jeffrey Stevenson Murer

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15664/jtr.188

Keywords:

far-right, identity

Abstract

In the aftermath of Anders Breivik’s shooting spree and bombing in Norway, many people asked where did the anger and the violence come from?  The article examines the contemporary trends in political and social discourses to conflate opponents with enemies.  Popular discourses, television and on-line media, radio talk shows and even newspaper spread the language of threat and insecurity, and the idea that the biggest threats may be the people in our own neighbourhoods, in our own cities, on our own streets.  These threatening individuals are those that do not quite fit in; they are familiar foreigners.  Similarly it explores the discourses of who should be afforded trust and protection within multi-ethnic, multi-lingual, multi-cultural political and social environments, who exhibits social membership and who should be excluded.  The language of austerity and shortage suggests that security is not a human right that all people are entitled to equally.  Rather if states can only afford to protect certain people, then by default the state chooses to actively not protect others.  This article explores the social and physical consequences these decisions have, particularly when certain individuals decide that they will do what others only talk about: eliminate enemies.

Author Biography

Jeffrey Stevenson Murer

Dr. Jeffrey Stevenson Murer is the Lecturer on Collective Violence and a Research Fellow to the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence at the University of St. Andrews.   Recently he was the Principal Investigator of the British Council funded European Study of Youth Mobilisation (ESYM), which examined the motivations of young people involved in radical political and social movements and their thoughts and opinions on political violence. For ESYM, more than 800 hundred young people were interviewed in five Central European cities: Bratislava, Brno, Budapest, Krakow and Warsaw; and more that 200 academics and practitioners participated in expert panel workshops in the Nordic cities of Copenhagen, Helsinki and Stockholm.  Dr. Murer is also a Scottish Institute for Policing Research Lecturer, and collaborates with colleagues from the Dutch National Police Academy and the University College Ghent on facilitating better community relations and social understanding in complex, multi-ethnic, and multi-lingual neighbourhoods.

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Published

2011-10-30

Issue

Section

Articles