Bordering and crisis narratives to illiberal ends

Szalai, Andras [Szalai, András (nemzetközi kapcso...), author] Department of International Relations and Europ... (ELTE / ELTE TÁTK)

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND POLITICS 1569-2159 1569-9862 23 (3) pp. 391-415 2024
  • Politikatudományi Bizottság: A nemzetközi
  • Szociológiai Tudományos Bizottság: C nemzetközi
  • Nyelvtudományi Bizottság: INT2
  • SJR Scopus - History: D1
Subjects:
  • Languages and Literature
This paper draws lessons from security and populism studies to theorize how radical right-wing populism (RRWP)utilizes borders as a symbolic resource in crisis narratives to clearly frame an “Us” and a threatening “Them”. By analyzing theHungarian Orbán regime’s evolving rhetoric on borders, the paper illustrates how populists employ crisis narratives not tomitigate, but exacerbate ontological insecurities, and thereby facilitate de-democratization by (re)shaping voter attitudes (cf. Homolar & Scholz 2019 ; Steele & Homolar2019 ). The paper suggests that populists-in-power rely on crisis and bordering narratives beyond voter mobilization:such narratives are in fact designed to legitimize and affirm illiberal practices that undermine liberal democracy itself, andcontribute to regime building. Border crises, and crisis politics, hence become a template for the manipulation of individuals’security-of-being, and thereby a tool in the politics of reassurance and control at the broader, societal level.
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2025-07-15 03:25