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Episode details

Radio 4,26 Feb 2021,28 mins,

Contains very strong language.

Available for over a year

Historian Camilla Schofield explores a century of British fascism. From the formation of the British Fascisti in 1923, through the BUF, the National Front and the BNP, the history of fascism in Britain is, in a sense, an unbroken thread. But if the politics – or anti-politics – has remained more-or-less consistent, with a lineage of hatreds, pseudo-science, failed leaders and tactics, the means by which fascism is calibrated and communicated in the 21st century has fundamentally changed. In the second programme in the series we look back at a march staged by the National Front – and the ensuing counter-demonstration – in Lewisham in 1977. Featuring: Professor Paul Gilroy, Director of the Sarah Parker Remond Centre for the Study of Racism & Racialisation Lord Peter Hain of Neath Professor Lez Henry, professor of Criminology and Sociology at the University of West London Paul Jackson, senior lecturer in History at the University of Northampton Joe Mulhall, Senior Researcher at Hope Not Hate and author of British Fascism after the Holocaust Thanks to Daniel Jones and Graham Macklin. Warning: the programme contains strong discriminatory language. Producer: Martin Williams

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