TY - JOUR
T1 - Echoes Without Integration
T2 - Strategic Resonance and the Limits of Radical Right Transnationalism
AU - Zanotti, Lisa
AU - Villalobos-Machuca, Fabián
AU - Roldán Duque, Francisco
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Universidad Complutense Madrid. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025/6/26
Y1 - 2025/6/26
N2 - This article investigates the formation of transnational networks within the radical right, examining ideological convergence across Latin America, Europe, and the United States. Analyzing speeches from key events such as the Madrid Forum, VIVA, and CPAC, we identify shared themes, framing strategies, and social boundary-making within radical right discourse. Employing a hybrid methodology that integrates automated coding with Large Language Models (LLMs) and manual categorization, our findings reveal a rhetoric that is cohesive yet adaptable to regional contexts, emphasizing national sovereignty, security, and cultural values framed against external threats from leftist ideologies and globalist elites. However, unlike historical left-wing transnational alliances that structured coordinated agendas and centralized strategies, these radical right networks lack formalized cohesion and centralized control. Instead, the radical right displays a form of selective transnationalism, with leaders strategically adapting foreign discourses when domestically beneficial while prioritizing national autonomy, resulting in a flexible and tentative rather than consolidated cooperation.
AB - This article investigates the formation of transnational networks within the radical right, examining ideological convergence across Latin America, Europe, and the United States. Analyzing speeches from key events such as the Madrid Forum, VIVA, and CPAC, we identify shared themes, framing strategies, and social boundary-making within radical right discourse. Employing a hybrid methodology that integrates automated coding with Large Language Models (LLMs) and manual categorization, our findings reveal a rhetoric that is cohesive yet adaptable to regional contexts, emphasizing national sovereignty, security, and cultural values framed against external threats from leftist ideologies and globalist elites. However, unlike historical left-wing transnational alliances that structured coordinated agendas and centralized strategies, these radical right networks lack formalized cohesion and centralized control. Instead, the radical right displays a form of selective transnationalism, with leaders strategically adapting foreign discourses when domestically beneficial while prioritizing national autonomy, resulting in a flexible and tentative rather than consolidated cooperation.
KW - LLMs
KW - discourse analysis
KW - framing strategies
KW - ideological alignment
KW - radical right
KW - transnational networks
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105009122631
U2 - 10.5209/poso.99134
DO - 10.5209/poso.99134
M3 - Article
VL - 62
JO - Politica y Sociedad
JF - Politica y Sociedad
IS - 2
M1 - 99134
ER -