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  1. May 28, 2021 · The New Right sees the deliberative democratic theories of second-generation critical theorists, who reformulated Critical theory away from the perceived dead ends of agential negativity toward universal communicative rationality, as key expressions of these forms of liberal power.

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      The New Right sees the deliberative democratic theories of...

  2. May 28, 2021 · Important parts of today’s New Right represent self-conscious appropriations of Critical themes and thinkers—turning them to self-declared “reactionary” ends.

  3. May 28, 2021 · Important parts of today’s New Right represent self-conscious appropriations of Critical themes and thinkers—turning them to self-declared “reactionary” ends. Developing outside the confines of the academy, these forms of thought have woven insights from across Critical theory into new and mobilizing forms of conservative ideology ...

  4. Journal of International Political Theory. Across the globe, radical conservative political forces and ideas are influencing and even transforming the landscape of international politics. Yet IR is remarkably ill-equipped to understand and engage these new challenges.

  5. Sep 29, 2015 · The “New Right” is a political, cultural, and intellectual movement that arose following the Second World War. The previous movement on the American right had been damaged by a variety of events, including the failure of President Herbert Hoover, a Progressive Republican; the subsequent popularity of President Franklin D. Roosevelt; the ...

  6. The New Right coalesce around a conceptualisation of the international driven by analytics and critiques of specific subjects, norms and practices, that should be treated as a distinct international theoretical offering. We refer to this vision as Reactionary Internationalism.

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  8. Critical theory has been attacked by both the Right (e.g., Feuer, 1974, 1980) and. the Left (e.g., Therborn, 1970, 1971), as well as by positivists (e.g., Adorno, et. al., 1976), but this fact is not sufficient to support a conspiratorial explanation of its marginal status within sociology.

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