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The right-wing opposition to ‘gender’ in the light of the ambiguity of the meaning of the term in EU documents

European Politics
Gender
Human Rights
Populism
European Parliament
LGBTQI
Elena Zacharenko
Tampere University
Eszter Kováts
Eötvös Loránd University
Elena Zacharenko
Tampere University

Abstract

Recent years have seen a rise in prominence – at both national and European levels – of anti-gender movements and parties. While actors using this rhetoric can be found across most EU member states, anti-gender rhetoric represents government policy in a few East-Central European countries, bringing these objections to the European level. We propose to analyse and interpret this ECE-led state opposition to ‘gender’ by examining the diversification of the meaning of this term at EU level, including a shift from a structural to an individualist one, which we argue lends empirical credibility to the anti-gender rhetoric of right-wing populist parties. We believe that a better understanding of the developments around the concept of gender on the progressive side will shed light on the anti-gender discourse and the popularity of the right-wing. Based on interviews with EU stakeholders in the European Commission, European Parliament and EU-level civil society, as well as on the analysis of European Commission documents and Council Conclusions, we track the use of the term ‘gender’ and the definition which has been attached to it, and interpret these changes in the context of feminist taboos and the neoliberal tendencies of feminist theory arriving to the EU polity.