Ethno-nationalism and Right-Wing Extremist Violence in the United States, 2000 through 2018

Susan Olzak

Sociological Science March 20, 2023
10.15195/v10.a6


Influential studies of right-wing extremist violence offer evidence that such violence is motivated by grievances intensified by a perceived loss in status or by economic dislocations. This article moves away from an emphasis on grievances by turning to theories of ethno-nationalism and group conflict. Ethno-nationalism is in part driven by attitudes of dominant groups favoring ethnic exclusion, whereas group threat theories explain that ethnic diversity increases the salience of ethnic boundaries and fuels a collective response to group threat. Such threats encourage violence to contain this threat and restore dominance. Exclusionary attitudes and support for expanded gun rights in America further legitimize a culture of ethno-nationalism that encourages violent acts. I test these arguments with data from the Pew Research Center, the Southern Poverty Law Center, and the Extremist Crime Database on right-wing violence. The state-level and county-level results support the claim that rising ethnic diversity raises the rate and volume of right-wing violence significantly. State-level results also find that rising memberships in the National Rifle Association increase the rate of right-wing violence significantly.
Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Susan Olzak: Stanford University
E-mail: olzak@stanford.edu

Acknowledgments: The author thanks Trent Steidley, Holly Hansen, and Stephen C. Nemeth for providing some of the data used in this study. The author is grateful to Bart Bonikowski, Mike Hannan, Doug McAdam, Rory McVeigh, Sarah A. Soule, Andy Walder, and Nella Van Dyke for providing helpful suggestions and criticisms on earlier drafts.

  • Citation: Olzak, Susan. 2023. “Ethno-nationalism and Right-Wing Extremist Violence in the United States, 2000 through 2018.” Sociological Science 10:197-226.
  • Received: August 17, 2022
  • Accepted: December 8, 2022
  • Editors: Ari Adut, Peter Bearman
  • DOI: 10.15195/v10.a6


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