Chair in Comparative Politics, University of York
Research on far right, populism, nationalism and European Politics
Joint Editor-In-Chief of Nations and Nationalism, Political Studies
Steering Committee ECPR Extremism&Democracy
LSE PhD
Daphne Halikiopoulou
Our article is now available Open Access!
We hope our typology is useful to study national teams (in all sports) and to further reflect on globalization effects on modern football.
The 2026 MAGA World Cup sees a further decline in "ethnic" national teams and a sharp rise in "diaspora" teams.
Cas Mudde
The 2026 update brings you 130 new research articles on the #RadicalRight. Here’s to the people who wrote these, and especially to 7 super-productive super-contributors: Marianna Griffini, Luca Manucci, @mattiazulianello.bsky.social, 1/2
2025 open acces #tbp: The Radical Right Research Robot: a model for political science comms across messy social media #radicalright @rrresrobot.bsky.social 🤖
After publishing "Youth Wings of the Populist Radical Right" yesterday, today we talked about it at the CES conference, with @dafnoukos.bsky.social & @pinheiromachado.bsky.social.
Hopefully, some of our engaged audience will now read the book (which you can do here: academic.oup.com/book/62992)
In a Policy Brief for the FEPS, @dafnoukos.bsky.social & @sofiavasilopoulou.bsky.social examine the possibilities of countering right-wing alliances in the EP; they propose recommendations from maintaining the cordon sanitaire to strengthening democratic alliances: brussels.fes.de/news/policy-...
Knowing who is likely to vote for a party doesn’t explain a party’s success.
Better data and methods doesn't negate the risks of drawing conclusions from individual-level findings on the interpretation of elections, write Tim Vlandas and @dafnoukos.bsky.social write on @lseeuroppblog.bsky.social
The #RadicalRight in France, Germany, the US, the Netherlands, and Sweden: T. Vlandas and D. Halikiopoulou. “Jihadist Terrorist Attacks and Far-Right Party Preferences: An "Unexpected Event During Survey Design" in Four European Countries”. In: Perspectives on Politics online
Why knowing who is more likely to vote for a political party doesn't necessarily explain the party's overall electoral success- our new paper with Tim Vlandas out in @ejprjournal.bsky.social
Voting! Gender! Normalisation! 130 new pieces on the far right for you
In our new paper for @ejprjournal.bsky.social Tim Vlandas and I offer a mathematical statement and simulations to assess the extent of the 'atomistic' fallacy on #VotingBehaviour, and illustrate the problem empirically by focusing on the example of #FarRight voting- available below Open Access
Drawing conclusions about electoral outcomes from individual-level findings about who is likely to vote for a party risks distorting how we interpret elections.
'The (forgotten) atomistic fallacy in political science and its implications for how we interpret elections': delighted our new research note with Tim Vlandas is just published in one of my favourite Political Science journals @ejprjournal.bsky.social: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
Daphne Halikiopoulou
Kai Arzheimer
Kai Arzheimer
Duncan McDonnell
Daphne Halikiopoulou
Wissensnetzwerk Rechtsextremismusforschung
LSE Blogs
RRResRobot
Daphne Halikiopoulou
Over the last 15 years, social media have become an integral part of the science infrastructure. The emergence of ‘Science Twitter’, the collective of scholars active on the platform now known as ‘...
So you think you know? 💬 🧑🔬
@dafnoukos.bsky.social & @ox.ac.uk's Tim Vlandas offer a mathematical statement and simulations to assess the extent of the 'atomistic' fallacy on #VotingBehaviour, and the issues with using European Social Survey data on #FarRight voting
#OpenAccess from @ejprjournal.bsky.social -
The (forgotten) atomistic fallacy in political science and its implications for how we interpret elections - https://cup.org/3RyKLSe
- Tim Vlandas & @dafnoukos.bsky.social
#FirstView
The (forgotten) atomistic fallacy in political science and its implications for how we interpret elections