Periodic Reporting for period 1 - RightFutures (‘Right’ Futures: the Liminal Political Timespace of the ‘Real Right’ in Chile and Italy)
Período documentado: 2023-05-15 hasta 2025-05-14
The project aimed to produce novel understandings of young people’s political experience in the (far)right, through their future-oriented visions, practices, emotions, and materialities. Moreover, through a comparative approach, the project aimed to examine the global relevance of inquiring into the far-right from a futural temporal perspective, to move beyond solely Euro/US-centric perspectives.
The project was developed within a broader context marked by the sharp global rise of far-right politics and the increasing participation of far-right groups and parties in democratic institutions. With its innovative future-oriented analytical perspective, the project brings to the fore the analysis of political temporalities in contexts where the (dictatorial) past remains contested and continues to shape contemporary political discourses. Moreover, since youth is often associated with the future, the project aimed to shed light on the way young people themselves engage with the future through and/or in contrast with their political activism. An ethnographic approach, still not widely used in research on the far-right due to the ethical and methodological complexities it presents, was central to this inquiry as it enabled the in-depth exploration of young people’s political experiences.
Given the fellowship’s focus on career development, Dr. Miltiadis also dedicated time to gaining new skills and experience, fostering international interdisciplinary networks across Chile, Denmark, the UK, Italy, and Cyprus, and participating in a wide range of activities and training. She organised an international interdisciplinary workshop on ‘The Future as Praxis’, aimed at inquiring, from an interdisciplinary perspective, into the relationship between the ‘doing’ and the ‘theorising’ of futures, with scholars from Denmark, the UK, Germany, and Italy. She is currently the co-convenor of the European Association of Social Anthropology (EASA) ‘Anthropology of Fascisms’ (AnthroFA) Network. These activities have laid the foundation for future collaborations and joint research initiatives. In parallel, Dr. Miltiadis has acquired and strengthened key technical and transferable skills. These include independent project management, as well as core research skills through training-through-research. The fellowship has contributed to Dr. Miltiadis’ expertise in conducting research in politically sensitive environments and with groups typically wary of academic inquiry. Dr. Miltiadis has attended and was invited to several conferences and events during the fellowship.
- the data collected show that political experience among young people who sympathise for or participate in right-wing and far-right parties and groups is heterogeneous. Young people’s reasons for joining these parties and groups, their level and type of engagement, and their narratives and understandings of their participation vary greatly both within and between groups. Moreover, the data indicate that young people join such parties and groups through different routes, and that there is a degree of fluidity through which they move between groups. Multiple expressions, materialisations, and practices of political activism have thus emerged throughout the study.
- through its analytical focus on the future, the research highlights that young people who participate in or sympathise for right-wing and far-right parties and groups engage with multiple futures. These include personal and biographical futures, political futures, national futures, democracy’s futures, and others, across different temporal scales (e.g. long-term or short-term). Multiple futures, thus, both shape and are shaped by young people’s political activism. Political activism, in this project, emerges as a multitemporal experience, where the future plays a significant role. Moreover, the project explored how young people articulate the commonly held association between youth and the future (or youth as the future), in relation to their political experiences.
- More broadly, the insights developed contribute to reflections on the use of ethnography in researching the far-right, as a unique perspective that sheds light on the everyday experience of political activism