Challenges in Studying Youth and the Influence of Far-Right Populism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conceptual Framework
The Effect of Digital Media
3. Methodological Considerations
The Problem of the Generations
4. Examples from Experience
4.1. Tapping in to Far-Right Influences in Online Youth Culture
4.2. Matching Interviewers and Interviewees
[When] I think of the left, I think of like Soviets, Mao Tse-Tung, Pol Pot, Hitler a little bit, he’s a complicated figure, the left will be like oh, he’s right wing (…) but he wasn’t, it was the National Socialist Party.(Evan3, 35, landscaper, de facto, my emphasis)
Feminism, to me, should have been finished in the 70s. I mean there’s equal rights, there’s equal pay, if anything, it’s gone the other way in a lot of ways, and now it’s just forcing women into roles that I don’t know if they even think they want.(Scott, 30, truck driver, married)
And,Violence is a part of man’s psyche, violence is what men have had to use in the past to get what they need and get what they want, protect what they want to protect, so it’s sort of ingrained in men from, I don’t know, say thousands of years ago.(Paul, mid-30s, engineering sub-manager, married)
It has been argued that one of the core characteristics of fascism is ‘the moral precondition of violence as natural’ (Heino, 2024). It is possible the use of ‘our’ in the last line of Ian’s reply, implicitly includes the interviewer on the basis of masculinity, suggesting that rapport has been established.Men are flooded with testosterone which is a hormone that increases violent tendencies, so if you take a cross section of the violent to least violent people, nine out of ten of the most violent people will be men (…) So that means it’s a part of our nature.(Ian, mid-thirties, allied health worker, married)
Yet another interviewee gave an example of channelling men’s violence along a traditional path,You can either channel that [violence] constructively or fail to channel that constructively, or you can attempt to quash it with disastrous consequences (…) either channelling it effectually into non-constructive activities, or it’s trying to quash it with labels such as toxic masculinity.(Ian, mid-thirties, allied health worker, married)
There’s a podcaster in the states that I listen to, his name is Ryan Michler, his podcast is called Order of Man, and he basically advocates for a revival of masculinity (…) talking about a traditional idea or sense of masculinity and trying to spread that (…) it’s largely about encouragement for men to lead families, to lead communities, to lead societies, basically.(Will, mid-thirties, farm supervisor, single)
The informant seemed happy to answer:Okay. I’m interested when you say women’s rights have gone too far. Can you be more specific about that?
Here, Bryce implies the discourse of male victimhood. He claims that men are now condemned for questioning gender-affirmative action based on the Australian Bureau of Statistics figures on women’s economic disadvantage. Scott articulated more or less the same discourse of male victimhood,Yeah, sure. One big thing is the gender pay gap (…) you’re not even allowed to argue how they’ve got to that statistic, and like I said (…) women don’t spend as long in the workforce because they have children.(Bryce, early 30s, solar panel installer, de facto)
As did Ethan,Why are we not talking about men’s place now in the world? Like you look at social media and it’s obvious that women sit on top of that hierarchy, right? And I just think men these days, I think a lot of us are lonely.(Scott, 30, truck driver, married)
Like a white male under 25 is the worst thing I could be right now.(Ethan, 24, studying agriculture, single)
And,I think a lot of the immigrants, like [from] India, well of Indian appearance, they can’t really keep up with the way our traffic works, social etiquette, you’ve got two families in a house—and like how they keep the street!(Evan, 35, landscaper, de facto)
I just think bringing boatload after boatload of people is doing nothing but diluting our culture.(Scott, 30, truck driver, married)
Interviewer: (pause) Does the Australian dream apply to you?
Scott: It did when I was a child growing up, I grew up in it. I don’t know if it’s possible anymore.
From this exchange it seems Scott felt he was listened to carefully and treated with respect by the young man interviewing him, whom he warmly addressed as ‘mate’ in the final seconds. On this occasion, the interviewer had clearly been able to establish rapport with Scott. As Lareau (2021) points out, there is nothing like carefully listening to people openly tell you things if you want to know what is going on. It is doubtful whether the informants would have been so frank about their contentious views unless they were talking ‘man-to-man’ to someone with whom they could immediately identify with in terms of gender, age and general appearance.Interviewer: I really appreciate your time.Scott: No worries. Thank you.Interviewer: No worries. Take it easy.Scott: You too, mate, bye.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | They were paid for their time. |
2 | This was an educated guess based on the number of racist sentiments expressed by participants in the online survey. |
3 | Informant names are pseudonyms. |
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Nilan, P. Challenges in Studying Youth and the Influence of Far-Right Populism. Youth 2025, 5, 47. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020047
Nilan P. Challenges in Studying Youth and the Influence of Far-Right Populism. Youth. 2025; 5(2):47. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020047
Chicago/Turabian StyleNilan, Pam. 2025. "Challenges in Studying Youth and the Influence of Far-Right Populism" Youth 5, no. 2: 47. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020047
APA StyleNilan, P. (2025). Challenges in Studying Youth and the Influence of Far-Right Populism. Youth, 5(2), 47. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020047