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The Online Network of Ethnonationalism: Exploring the discursive frames of the extreme right in Finland

Tuomainen, Maiju LU (2016) SIMV07 20161
Department of Political Science
Master of Science in Global Studies
Graduate School
Abstract
This thesis explores the structure and discursive frames in the rhetoric of the online extreme right network in Finland. Departing from the constraints of identity and ideology, the individual nodes are seen as a part of a network that mobilizes on the basis of shared discourses. Social network analysis is utilized to explore the structure and connections of the extreme right. This is followed by qualitative content analysis of the main self-identification doctrines that provides further insight on the shared principal issues in the network. These are understood through collective action frames and framing process analysis that shows how these groups understand their external reality and construct their political communication... (More)
This thesis explores the structure and discursive frames in the rhetoric of the online extreme right network in Finland. Departing from the constraints of identity and ideology, the individual nodes are seen as a part of a network that mobilizes on the basis of shared discourses. Social network analysis is utilized to explore the structure and connections of the extreme right. This is followed by qualitative content analysis of the main self-identification doctrines that provides further insight on the shared principal issues in the network. These are understood through collective action frames and framing process analysis that shows how these groups understand their external reality and construct their political communication strategically to mobilize supporters. This results in identifying the main shared discursive frames of the network as populism, anti-modernism, ethnonationalism, and xenohobia. Even if there are peculiar differences between the groups, ethno-nationalist xenophobia and anti-establishment populism is the dominating discursive master frame of the extreme right network in Finland. Furthermore, the findings suggest that even though the Finnish extreme right is only loosely connected nationally, the majority have global connections. This emphasizes the transnationalization of the extreme right over the internet and urges for more research on these social structures. (Less)
Popular Abstract
This thesis explores the structure and discursive frames in the rhetoric of the online extreme right network in Finland. Departing from the constraints of identity and ideology, the individual nodes are seen as a part of a network that mobilizes on the basis of shared discourses. Social network analysis is utilized to explore the structure and connections of the extreme right. This is followed by qualitative content analysis of the main self-identification doctrines that provides further insight on the shared principal issues in the network. These are understood through collective action frames and framing process analysis that shows how these groups understand their external reality and construct their political communication... (More)
This thesis explores the structure and discursive frames in the rhetoric of the online extreme right network in Finland. Departing from the constraints of identity and ideology, the individual nodes are seen as a part of a network that mobilizes on the basis of shared discourses. Social network analysis is utilized to explore the structure and connections of the extreme right. This is followed by qualitative content analysis of the main self-identification doctrines that provides further insight on the shared principal issues in the network. These are understood through collective action frames and framing process analysis that shows how these groups understand their external reality and construct their political communication strategically to mobilize supporters. This results in identifying the main shared discursive frames of the network as populism, anti-modernism, ethnonationalism, and xenohobia. Even if there are peculiar differences between the groups, ethno-nationalist xenophobia and anti-establishment populism is the dominating discursive master frame of the extreme right network in Finland. Furthermore, the findings suggest that even though the Finnish extreme right is only loosely connected nationally, the majority have global connections. This emphasizes the transnationalization of the extreme right over the internet and urges for more research on these social structures. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Tuomainen, Maiju LU
supervisor
organization
course
SIMV07 20161
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Social movements, social network analysis, collective action frames, extreme right
language
English
id
8878387
date added to LUP
2016-06-27 11:50:12
date last changed
2016-06-27 11:50:12
@misc{8878387,
  abstract     = {{This thesis explores the structure and discursive frames in the rhetoric of the online extreme right network in Finland. Departing from the constraints of identity and ideology, the individual nodes are seen as a part of a network that mobilizes on the basis of shared discourses. Social network analysis is utilized to explore the structure and connections of the extreme right. This is followed by qualitative content analysis of the main self-identification doctrines that provides further insight on the shared principal issues in the network. These are understood through collective action frames and framing process analysis that shows how these groups understand their external reality and construct their political communication strategically to mobilize supporters. This results in identifying the main shared discursive frames of the network as populism, anti-modernism, ethnonationalism, and xenohobia. Even if there are peculiar differences between the groups, ethno-nationalist xenophobia and anti-establishment populism is the dominating discursive master frame of the extreme right network in Finland. Furthermore, the findings suggest that even though the Finnish extreme right is only loosely connected nationally, the majority have global connections. This emphasizes the transnationalization of the extreme right over the internet and urges for more research on these social structures.}},
  author       = {{Tuomainen, Maiju}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{The Online Network of Ethnonationalism: Exploring the discursive frames of the extreme right in Finland}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}