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Building: Palazzo Pedagaggi, Floor: 3, Room: AULA E
Friday 11:00 - 12:30 CEST (03/07/2026)
How does the far right strategically deploy gender, identity, and knowledge claims to advance its political project? This panel examines the discursive and organizational strategies through which far-right actors reframe rights, construct collective identities, and establish epistemic legitimacy across Europe. Moving beyond traditional party-political analysis, the papers reveal how far-right mobilization operates through civil society organizations, gendered rhetoric, transnational knowledge networks, and digital community-building. The panel investigates multiple dimensions of far-right discursive strategy. It examines how civil society organizations tied to far-right parties frame family and reproductive rights to challenge liberal democratic values, assessing their impact on democratic debate. Gender emerges as a strategic tool through femonationalism. Beyond individual parties, the panel analyzes how transnational far-right epistemic communities establish legitimacy by hybridizing traditional professionalism with far-right symbols, legitimizing partisan actors as knowledge producers, and serving as knowledge reserves connecting disparate local contexts. Digital spaces receive particular attention as sites where far-right actors construct "Alt-European" identity.