Riccardo Marchi is Senior Research Fellow at the Center for International Studies at the University of Lisbon, Portugal.
Introduction
Part I - The Far Right at the end of the authoritarian regime (1945-1974)
Chapter 1 - The far right intellectual milieu at the end of the World War II (1945-1960)
Chapter 2 - The far right at the outbreak of the War in Africa (1961-1968)
Chapter 3 - The right-wing opposition to the Marcello Caetano Government (1968-1974)
Part II - The Far Right during the transition to democracy (1974-1982)
Chapter 1 - The far right resistance during the revolution (1974-1975)
Chapter 2 - The far right resurgence in the 'democratic normalization' (1976-1982)
Chapter 3 - The metapolitics as the new strategy to modernize the far right (1982-1985)
Part III - The Far Right during the consolidated democracy (1982-2015)
Chapter 1 - A new cycle in democracy: the groupuscular and subcultural far right (1985-1999)
Chapter 2 - The new party strategy at the dawn of the new millennium (1999-2015)
Chapter 3 - The identitarian movement in Portugal
The book discusses the far right in the contemporary Portugal (1945-2015) within three different periods: the end of the authoritarian regime of António de Oliveira Salazar (1945-1974), the transition to democracy after the coup d'état of April 25th (1974-1982) and the democratic regime until the present (1982-2015). The analysis focuses on political groups and parties, social movements, ideologies, intellectuals and publications acting at the extreme right of the political spectrum of the Portuguese authoritarian regime and of the democratic regime, both on a national and international level. The book also contextualizes the Portuguese far right within the political thought and the organisational models of the wider European extreme right.
A qualitative in-depth case study and the outcome of ten years of research, this book offers analysis of historical and contemporary primary sources, previously unexplored archives and in-depth interviews. Assessing the extent to which the behaviour of the far right is altered in different political environments and situations, this book makes an innovative and unique contribution to scholarship on the extreme right within southern Europe and will be of interest to students and scholars researching extreme right politics, as well as European history and politics more generally.