This bibliography provides an ever-expanding list of academic resources relevant to the study of the far right and the environment. If you notice something missing, please let us know by writing to pefrnetwork@protonmail.com.
[Last update: 25 December 2025]
Aguilera-Carnerero, C. (2023): The environmental semiotics of the Spanish far-right populism: Vox’s visual rhetoric strategies online. In B. Forchtner (ed). Visualising Far-Right Environments. Communication and the Politics of Nature. Manchester University Press. 83-103.
Ahmann, C. and Oguz, Z. (2025): Collection introduction: Everyday and emergent ecofascisms, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/02637758251374876
Ahmann, C. and Proctor, D. (2025): The storm before the storm, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/02637758251376757
Ahmann, C., Bhan, M., Coțofană, A., Govindrajan, R., Leser, J., Oguz, Z., Suzuki, Y. and Theriault, N. (2025): Weaponizing nature, naturalizing violence: Anthropologies of ecofascism, American Anthropologist. https://doi.org/10.1111/aman.70043
Aiolfi, T. (2024): Le Pen, Zemmour and the ‘patriotic ecology’ of the French far right: The case of the 2022 presidential elections, Observatorio, 18(6): 1-21. https://doi.org/10.15847/obsOBS18520242593
Allen, I. K., Ekberg, K., Holgersen, S. and Malm, A. (2024) (eds). Political Ecologies of the Far Right. Manchester University Press.
Allen, I. K. (2022): Heated attachments to coal: Everyday industrial breadwinning petro-masculinity and domestic heating in the Silesian home. In K. Iwińska and X. Bukowska (eds). Gender and Energy Transition. Springer. 189-222.
Allen, I. K. (2021). Dirty Coal: Industrial Populism as Purification in Poland’s Mining Heartland. (Doctoral Dissertation). Stockholm: KTH Royal Institute of Technology.
Almiron, N., Boykoff, M., Narberhaus, M. and Heras, F. (2020): Dominant counter-frames in influential climate contrarian European think tanks, Climatic Change 162(4): 2003–2020.
Anson, A. and Banerjee, A. (2023): Green walls: Everyday ecofascism and the politics of proximity, boundary 2 50(1): 137-164.
Antonacci, J. P. (2023): Green Großraum: Carl Schmitt’s political ecology of space, Nordia Geographical Publications, 1–19. https://doi.org/10.30671/nordia.121455
Antonsich, M. (2021): Natives and aliens: Who and what belongs in nature and in the nation?, Area 53(2): 303-310.
Aue, P. (2024). Narrating the (climate) crisis: Discursive strategies of the AfD on TikTok. MA thesis at Lund University.
Aronczyk, M. (2023): Branding the nation in the era of climate crisis: Eco-nationalism and the promotion of green national sovereignty, Nations and Nationalism. https://doi.org/10.1111/nana.12942
Arluke, A. and Sax, B. (1992): Understanding Nazi animal protection and the Holocaust, Anthrozoös 5(1): 6-31.
Armiero, M. (2014): Introduction: Fascism and nature, Modern Italy 19(3): 241-245.
Armiero, M., Biasillo, R. and Graf von Hardenberg, W. (2022). Mussolini’s Nature. An Environmental History of Italian Fascism. MIT Press.
Atkins, E. (2023): What next for the climate change culture wars?, Environmental Research: Climate. https://doi.org/10.1088/2752-5295/aced62
Bangstad, S. and Darwish, M. (2023): Ecofascism and the politics of replacement in the discourse of the Nordic Resistance Movement (NRM). In S. Bracke and L. M. Hernández Aguilar The Politics of Replacement. Routledge. 95-106.
Barcena, I., Ibarra, P. and Zubiaga, M. (1997): The evolution of the relationship between ecologism and nationalism. In M. R. Redclift and G. Woodgate (eds). The International Handbook of Environmental Sociology. Edward Elgar. 300–315.
Barkun, M. (2024): Environmentalism on the American extreme right, Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 18(3): 413–429. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.23702
Barla, J. and S. Bjork-James (2022): Introduction: Entanglements of anti-feminism and anti-environmentalism in the far-right, Australian Feminist Studies 36(110): 377-387.
Batel, S., Valquaresma, A. and Alba, M. (2024): Rural communities’ energy metabolisms in Portugal: Between territorial injustices and far-right populism, Journal of Rural Studies, 111: 103425.
Båtstrand, S. (2014): Giving content to new politics: From broad hypothesis to empirical analysis using Norwegian manifesto data on climate change, Party Politics 20(6): 930-939.
Beau Segers, I. and Weisskircher, M. (2022). What is the relationship between the far right and (anti-)environmentalism? C-REX Compendium, Center for Research on Extremism, University of Oslo.
Beeson, M. (2010): The coming of environmental authoritarianism, Environmental Politics 19(2): 276-294.
Bélanger É, Mongrain P, Gareau-Paquette T, Mahéo V-A. (2025): A party that went viral? The drivers of support for the Parti Conservateur du Québec in the 2022 election, Canadian Journal of Political Science, doi:10.1017/S0008423924000829
Benegal, S. and M. R. Holman (2021): Understanding the importance of sexism in shaping climate denial and policy opposition, Climatic Change 167(3): 48.
Bennett, S. and Kwiatkowski, C. (2019): The environment as an emerging discourse in Polish far-right politics. In B. Forchtner (ed). The Far Right and the Environment: Politics, Discourse and Communication. Routledge. 237-253.
Benoist, L. (2020): Rootedness, borders and anti-capitalism to counter a “totalitarian” globalist left ideology: Ecology in the metapolitics of the French far right today. Ecologia Politica 59.
Benoist, L. (2021): Green is the new brown: ecology in the metapolitics of the far right. Undisciplined Environments. Published online.
Benoist, L. (2023): Far-right localism as an environmental strategy in France. Nordia Geographical Publications. https://doi.org/10.30671/nordia.140962
Benoist, L., Turner, J. and Bailey, D. (2024): Ecofascism in the shadow of ‘patriotic ecology’: Nativism, economic greenwashing, and the evolution of far-right political ecology in France, Politics. https://doi.org/10.1177/02633957241273649
Berberich, C. (2006): This Green and Pleasant Land: Cultural constructions of Englishness. In R. Burden and S. Kohl (eds). Landscape and Englishness. Rodopi. 207-224.
Berker, L. E. (2024): Turn to the right, turn away from the green?—A nuanced analysis on how a populist radical right party affects environmental policy making in Sweden, Review of Policy Research, https://doi.org/10.1111/ropr.12631.
Berker, L. E. and J. Pollex (2021): Friend or foe?—Comparing party reactions to Fridays for Future in a party system polarised between AfD and Green Party, Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft 15: 1-19.
Berker, L. E. and J. Pollex (2022): Explaining differences in party reactions to the Fridays for Future-movement – a qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) of parties in three European countries, Environmental Politics 1-38.
Bettini, G. and Casaglia, A. (2024): From denial to domestication: Unpacking Italy’s right-wing approach to climate migration and security, Geoforum, 155: 104079.
Beyer, M. and Weisskircher, M. (2024): Love as a key emotion for the far right? Environmentalism, affective politics and the Anastasia ecological settler movement in Germany, Environmental Values. https://doi.org/10.1177/09632719241272141
Bhargava, B. (2024): The National Front and environmental politics, 1967–90, Modern British History. hwae053, https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwae053.
Bhatia, R. (2004): Green or brown: white nativists environmental movements. In A. L. Ferber (ed). Home-grown Hate: Gender and Organized Racism. Routledge. 194–214.
Biehl, J. and Staudenmaier, P. (2011[1995]). Ecofascism Revisited. New Compass Press.
Biskamp, F. (2023): Die Umweltpolitik von Rechtsaußenparteien in Europa, Ökologisches Wirtschaften – Fachzeitschrift, 38(1): 10–12.
Bivar, V. (2022): The Patriot Ecology of the French Far Right. Environmental History 27(4), 618-624.
Björnberg, K. E., et al. (2017): Climate and environmental science denial: A review of the scientific literature published in 1990–2015, Journal of Cleaner Production 167: 229-241.
Blackbourn, D. (2006). The Conquest of Nature: Water, Landscape, and the Making of Modern Germany. W. W. Norton & Company.
Bloomfield, E. F. and D. Tillery (2019): The Circulation of Climate Change Denial Online: Rhetorical and Networking Strategies on Facebook, Environmental Communication 13(1): 23-34.
Blumenfeld, J. (2022): Climate barbarism: Adapting to a wrong world, Constellations. doi: 10.1111/1467-8675.12596.
Boast, H. (2022): Theorizing the Gay Frog, Environmental Humanities 14(3): 661-679.
Bogado, N. (2024): Pro-environmental nationalism is still nationalism: How political identity and prior attitudes affect nationalist framing effects on support for climate action, Environmental Communication, DOI: 10.1080/17524032.2024.2310625
Boecher, M., Zeigermann, U., Berker, L. and Jabra, D. (2022): Climate policy expertise in times of populism – knowledge strategies of the AfD regarding Germany’s climate package, Environmental Politics 31(5): 820-840.
Boggs, Kyle (2019): The rhetorical landscapes of the ‘alt right’ and the Patriot Movements: Settler entitlement to native land. In B. Forchtner (ed). The Far Right and the Environment: Politics, Discourse and Communication. Routledge. 293-309.
Böhmelt, T. (2021): Populism and environmental performance, Global Environmental Politics 21(3): 97-123.
Böhmelt, T., Koubi, V. and Bernauer, T. (2022): Why populism may facilitate non-state actors’ access to international environmental institutions, Environmental Politics 1-21.
Bosetti, V., Colantone, I., De Vries, C.E. and Musto, G. (2025): Green backlash and right-wing populism. Nature Climate Change 15: 822–828. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-025-02384-0
Bosworth, K. (2022): Populism and the rise of the far right: Two different problems for political ecology, Political Geography 94: 102531.
Bosworth, K. (2022): The bad environmentalism of ‘nature is healing’ memes, cultural geographies 29(3): 353–374.
Boukala, S. and Tountasaki, E. (2019): From Black to Green: Analysing Le Front National’s ‘Patriotic Ecology’. In B. Forchtner (ed). The Far Right and the Environment: Politics, Discourse and Communication. Routledge. 72-87.
Bramwell, A. (1985). Blood and Soil: Walther Darré and Hitler’s “Green Party”. Kensal Press.
Bramwell, A. (1989). Ecology in the Twentieth Century: A History. Yale University Press.
Brás, G. R., Lillebø, A. and Vieira, H. (2024): Current climate action trends in party-political manifestos: A content analysis provides hints to move forward, Sustainable Development, 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.3203
Brás, G. R., Lillebø, A. I. and Vieira, H. (2025): Holding sustainability promises in politics: Trends in ecosystem and resource management in electoral party manifestos, Sustainability, 17(15): 6749.
Brass, T. (1997): The agrarian myth, the ‘new’ populism and the ‘new’ right, The Journal of Peasant Studies 24(4): 201-245.
Brännlund, A. and Peterson, L. (2024): Power politics: How electric grievances shape election outcomes, Ecological Economics, 217: 108077.
Brännlund, A., Amcoff, J., Österman, M., Peterson, L. and Brännlund, H. (2024): Jolts at the ballot box: Electricity prices and voting in Swedish manufacturing communities, Energy Research & Social Science, 110. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.erss.2024.103419
Brodtmann, C. (2025): Exclusionary environmentalism: Exploring gender and antifeminism in far-right ecologismsm, Environmental Communication, 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1080/17524032.2025.2596614
Brüggemeier, F.J., Cioc M., and Zeller, T. (eds). (2005). How Green Were the Nazis? Nature, Environment, and Nation in the Third Reich. Ohio University Press.
Bryant, J. C. (2022): Ecos, ethnos, and fascism, Contexts 21(3): 51–53.
Bryant, J. C. and Farrell, J. (2024): Conservatism, the far right, and the environment, Annual Review of Sociology 50. 10.1146/annurev-soc-083023-035225
Bulli, G. (2019): Environmental politics on the Italian far right: not a party issue? In B. Forchtner (ed). The Far Right and the Environment: Politics, Discourse and Communication. Routledge. 88-103.
Burnett, S. (2019): Constructing white autochthony in South Africa’s “soul country”: Intersections of race and land, Discourse, Context & Media 30: 100286.
Burnett, S. (2023): Right as rain: affective publics and the changing visual rhetoric of the far right in South Africa. In B. Forchtner (ed). Visualising Far-Right Environments. Communication and the Politics of Nature. Manchester University Press. 24-42.
Burnett, S. (2025). Analysing Environmental Discourse: A Critical Approach. Bloomsbury.
Busch, T. and Judick, L. (2021): Climate change—that is not real! A comparative analysis of climate-sceptic think tanks in the USA and Germany, Climatic Change 164(1): 18.
Buttel, F. H. and Larson, O. W. I. (1980): Whither environmentalism – The future political path of the environmental movement, Natural Resources Journal 20(2): 323-344.
Buzogány, A. and Mohamad-Klotzbach, C. (2021): Populism and nature—the nature of populism: New perspectives on the relationship between populism, climate change, and nature protection, Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Politikwissenschaft 15: 155-164.
Cagle, L. (2023): The (paranoid) style of American climate politics: a comparative visual rhetoric analysis of web design by far-right and left conspiracists in the United States. In B. Forchtner (ed). Visualising Far-Right Environments. Communication and the Politics of Nature. Manchester University Press. 274-293.
Caiani, M. and Lubarda, B. (2023): Conditional environmentalism of right-wing populism in power: ideology and/or opportunities?, Environmental Politics. DOI: 10.1080/09644016.2023.2242749
Campion, K. (2021): Defining ecofascism: Historical foundations and contemporary interpretations in the extreme right, Terrorism and Political Violence 1-19.
Campion, K. and Phillips, J. (2023): The exclusivist claims of Pacific ecofascists: visual environmental communication by far-right groups in Australia and New Zealand. In B. Forchtner (ed). Visualising Far-Right Environments. Communication and the Politics of Nature. Manchester University Press. 43-62.
Caprotti, F. (2016): The invisible war on nature: The Abyssinian war (1935–1936) in newsreels and documentaries in Fascist Italy, Modern Italy 19(3): 305-321.
Carle, Z. (2017): Contre-révolutions écologiques: Quand les droites dures investissent la défense de la nature, Revue du Crieur 8(3), 44-61.
Carle, Z. (2023): From metapolitics to electoral communication: visualising ‘nature’ in the French far right. In B. Forchtner (ed). Visualising Far-Right Environments. Communication and the Politics of Nature. Manchester University Press. 166-185.
Cederlöf, G. and Sivaramakrishnan, K. (eds) (2014): Ecological Nationalisms: Nature, Livelihoods, and Identities in South Asia. University of Washington Press.
CEPREMAP (2023): Political positioning and acceptance of environmental measures: the case of the far right, Note de l’OBE 2023 – 15 05 december 2023.
Ćetković, S. and Hagemann, C. (2020): Changing climate for populists? Examining the influence of radical-right political parties on low-carbon energy transitions in Western Europe, Energy Research & Social Science 66: 101571.
Chapoutot, J. (2012): The Nazis and nature. Protectors or Predators?, Vingtième Siècle. Revue d’histoire 113: 23-39.
Chikh, M’hamed S. and Hefele, P (2025): European political parties and the reframing of sustainability: Discursive shifts and integration dynamics in the EU, Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal. https://doi.org/10.1108/SAMPJ-12-2024-1403
Christensen, C. B. (2024): Ecofascism and Green Nazis in Denmark 1920–2020, Scandinavian Journal of History, 1–23. https://doi.org/10.1080/03468755.2024.2434679
Christou, M. (2023): Purity and control: gender and visual environmental communication by the extreme right in Cyprus. In B. Forchtner (ed). Visualising Far-Right Environments. Communication and the Politics of Nature. Manchester University Press. 104-124.
Cislak A., Wójcik A., Borkowska J. and Milfont, T. (2023): Secure and defensive forms of national identity and public support for climate policies, PLOS Climate 2(6): e0000146. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pclm.0000146
Chen, T., Salloum, A., Gronow, A., Ylä-Anttila, T. and Kivelä, M. (2021): Polarization of climate politics results from partisan sorting: Evidence from Finnish Twittersphere, Global Environmental Change, 71, 102348.
Christner, C., Merz, P., Barkela, B., Jungkunst, H. and von Sikorski, C. (2024): Combatting climate disinformation: Comparing the effectiveness of correction placement and type, Environmental Communication. DOI: 10.1080/17524032.2024.2316757
Coates, I. (1993): A cuckoo in the nest: The National Front and green ideology. In J. Holder, P. Lane, S. Eden, R. Reeve, U. Collier and K. Anderson (eds). Perspectives on the Environment. Avebury Press. 13-28.
Conversi, D. (2024): Eco-fascism: an oxymoron? Far-right nationalism, history, and
the climate emergency, Frontiers in Human Dynamics. 6:1373872. doi: 10.3389/fhumd.2024.1373872
Conversi, D. (2023): State of Nationalism (SoN): Nationalism and Climate Change, Studies on National Movements 11: 204-229.
Conversi, D. (2020): The ultimate challenge: Nationalism and climate change, Nationalities Papers 48(4): 625-636.
Conversi, D. and Hau, F. (2021): Green nationalism. Climate action and environmentalism in left nationalist parties, Environmental Politics, 30(7): 1089-1110.
Conversi, D. and Posocco, L. (2022): Which nationalism for the anthropocene? A comparative study of exemplary green nation-states, Frontiers in Political Science 36.
Corradi F. (2025): The role of coherence in climate change science: A methodological proposal, in: Cambio. Rivista sulle trasformazioni sociali. doi:
10.36253/cambio- 17902
Cosgrove, D. (2004): Landscape and Landschaft, GHI Bulletin 35: 57–71.
Cotofana, A. (2025): Troubled waters and no bridges: The ecofascisms of an imagined global middle class, Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/02637758251376766
Cotofana, A. (2022): Xenophobic Mountains: Landscape Sentience Reconsidered in the Romanian Carpathians. Palgrave.
Cotofana, A. and Kuran, H. (2023) (eds). Sentient Ecologies: Xenophobic Imaginaries of Landscape. Oxford: Berghahn Books.
Cotofan, M., Kuralbayeva, K. and Matakos, K. (2024). Global Warming Cools Voters Down: How Climate Concerns Affect Policy Preferences. Discussion Paper No. 1991. Centre for Economic Performance.
Coupland, P. (2017). Farming, Fascism and Ecology: A Life of Jorian Jenks. Routledge.
Cremaschi, S. and Stanig, P. (2024): Voting and climate change: How an extreme weather event increased support for a radical-right incumbent in Italy, The Journal of Politics. https://doi.org/10.1086/734248
Crockford, S. (2024): Preparing for the coming storm: Right-wing spiritualities and environmental consciousness in the United States, Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 18(3): 393–412. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.23660
Crulli, M., & Zulianello, M. (2025). Not really concerned? Populist radical right voters and climate change, Environmental Politics 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1080/09644016.2025.2506344
CSSN (2021) Position Paper 3, Dismantling the Environmental State: Actors, Strategies and Discourses Behind the Bolsonaro Attack on the National Environmental Regulation.
Daggett, C. (2018): Petro-masculinity: Fossil fuels and authoritarian desire, Millennium 47(1): 25-44.
Daggett, C. (2019). The Birth of Energy. Fossil Fuels, Thermodynamics, and the Politics of Work. Duke University Press.
Dannemann, H. (2024): Populism and anti-populism in climate politics: conflict line, contingent relation, or tacit alliance in climate obstruction?, Politische Vierteljahreszeitschrift. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11615-024-00581-8
Dannemann, H. (2023): Experiments of authoritarian sustainability: Völkisch settlers and far-right prefiguration of a climate behemoth. Sustainability: Science, Practice and Policy 19(1). DOI: 10.1080/15487733.2023.2175468
Darby, W. J. (2000). Landscape and Identity. Geographies of Nation and Class in England. Berg.
Darwish, M. and Gottzén, L. (2025): The contemplative man: ‘positive’ affect and masculinity in ecofascist visual communication. Journal of Gender Studies, 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1080/09589236.2025.2479797
Darwish, M. (2024): Fascism, nature and communication: a Discursive-affective analysis of cuteness in ecofascist propaganda, Feminist Media Studies. DOI: 10.1080/14680777.2024.2313006
Darwish, M. (2021): Nature, masculinities, care and the far-right. In M. Hultman and P. Pulé (eds). Men, Masculinities, and Earth Contending with the (m)Anthropocene. Palgrave Macmillan. 183-206.
Davidov, V. (2015): Beyond formal environmentalism: Eco-nationalism and the “Ringing Cedars” of Russia, Culture, Agriculture, Food and Environment 37(1): 2-13.
Dawson, J. I. (2000): The two faces of environmental justice: Lessons from the eco‐nationalist phenomenon, Environmental Politics 9(2): 22-60.
Dawson, J. I. (1996). Eco-Nationalism: Anti-Nuclear Activism and National Identity in Russia, Lithuania, and Ukraine. Duke University Press.
Drecker, P. (2025): Dynamics of electoral polarisation in climate policy discourse: A temporal network analysis, Politics and Governance, 13: 10004.
de Boer, J. and Aiking, H. (2022): EU Citizen support for climate-friendly agriculture (Farm) and dietary options (Fork) across the left-right political spectrum, Climate Policy 1-13.
de Nadal, L. (2024): From denial to the culture wars: A study of climate misinformation on YouTube, Environmental Communication, 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1080/17524032.2024.2363861
de Nadal, L. (2025): Low-emissions, High Tensions: Social Media Groups and the Escalation of Climate Obstruction, Environmental Communication, 1–22. https://doi.org/10.1080/17524032.2025.2596616
Del Arco Blanco, M. Á. and Gorostiza, S. (2021): ‘Facing the sun’: Nature and nation in Franco’s ‘New Spain’ (1936–51), Journal of Historical Geography 71: 73-82.
Denk, D. and Siebert, J. (2024): „Grüne Eliten gegen den Volkswillen“: Populistische Narrative im Bereich der Umweltpolitik. Fact Sheet, Umweltbundesamt. Online at: https://www.umweltbundesamt.de/sites/default/files/medien/11850/publikationen/populismus_factsheet.pdf [16.05.2024]
De-Shalit, A. and Talias, M. (1994): Green or blue and white? Environmental controversies in Israel, Environmental Politics 3(2): 273–294.
Deutsch, S. (2021): Populist authoritarian neoliberalism in Brazil: making sense of Bolsonaro’s anti-environment agenda, Journal of Political Ecology 28(1): 823-844.
Dickson, Z. P. and Hobolt, S. B. (2024): Going against the grain: Climate change as a wedge issue for the radical right, Comparative Political Studies. https://doi.org/10.1177/00104140241271297
Dietz, B. (2008): Countryside-versus-city in European thought: German and British anti-urbanism between the Wars, The European Legacy 13(7): 801-814.
Ditt, K. (1996): Nature Conservation in England and Germany 1900–70: Forerunner of environmental protection?, Contemporary European History 5(1): 1-28.
Dogliani, P. (2016): Environment and leisure in Italy during Fascism, Modern Italy 19(3): 247-259.
Domann, V. (2023): Shifting notions of the rural: Protests over traffic infrastructure and far-right normalization, Nordia Geographical Publications, 1–26. https://doi.org/10.30671/nordia.122137
Dominick III, R. H. (1992). The Environmental Movement in Germany: Prophets and Pioneers, 1871-1971. John Wiley & Sons.
Droussin, L. (2024). «Eigen koeien en appelen eerst!» – L’écologie politique du Vlaams Belang. Faculté des sciences économiques, sociales, politiques et de communication, Université catholique de Louvain.
Prom.: Biard, Benjamin. http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/thesis:47698
Dubiau. A. (2022): Écofascismes. Grevis.
Duijndam, S. and P. van Beukering (2020): Understanding public concern about climate change in Europe, 2008–2017: The influence of economic factors and right-wing populism, Climate Policy 1-15.
Duina, F. and Zhou, H. X. (2024). The Populist Logic on the Environment. Routledge.
Duina, F. and Zhou, H. X. (2024): The populist discourse on the environment: framework and evidence from Europe and the Americas, Journal of Political Ideologies. https://doi.org/10.1080/13569317.2024.2378725
Dyett, J. and Thomas, C. (2019): Overpopulation discourse: Patriarchy, racism, and the specter of ecofascism, Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 18(1-2): 205-224
Efstathiou, S. (2025): Keep it ‘natural’, ‘wild’, ‘organic’ and ‘pure’: Thick concepts crossing Nazi art, science and environmental policy, Food Ethics 10, 10 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s41055-025-00169-x
Ekberg, K., Forchtner, B., Hultman, M. and Jylhä, K. M. (2022). Climate Obstruction. How Denial, Delay and Inaction are Heating the Planet. Routlede.
Envall, F. and Andersson, J. D. (2025): Forging green frontiers: The agonistic potential of energy communities, Human Geography. https://doi.org/10.1177/19427786251382139
Farber, D. A. (2017): The Conservative as environmentalist: From Goldwater and the early Reagan to the 21st Century, Arizona Law Review 59.
Farstad, F. M. (2018): What explains variation in parties’ climate change salience?, Party Politics 24(6): 698–707.
Fernández-García, B. and Schwörer, J. (2025): El populismo verde: más allá del nativismo ambiental y el populismo negacionista. In: Manuel Arias Maldonado and Ángel Valencia Sáiz (eds). Desafío Antropoceno. Democracia, sostenibilidad y justicia en un planeta cambiante. Editorial Tirant Lo Blanch.
Flipo, F. (2018): The Coming Authoritarian Ecology. Wiley-ISTE.
Forchtner, B. (2016): Longing for communal purity: Countryside, (far-right) nationalism and the (im)possibility of progressive politics of nostalgia. In C. Karner and B. Weicht (eds). The Communalities of Global Crises. Palgrave. 271-295.
Forchtner, B. (2019): Articulations of climate change by the Austrian far right: A discourse-historical perspective on what is ‘allegedly manmade’. In R. Wodak and P. Bevelander (eds). “Europe at the Cross-road”: Confronting Populist, Nationalist and Global Challenges. Nordic Academic Press. 159-179.
Forchtner, B. (2019): Climate change and the far right, WIREs Climate Change, 10(5): 1-11. DOI: 10.1002/wcc.604.
Forchtner, B. (2019): Far-right articulations of the natural environments: An introduction. In B. Forchtner (ed). The Far Right and the Environment: Politics, Discourse and Communication. Routledge. 1-17.
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