Exportar Publicação
A publicação pode ser exportada nos seguintes formatos: referência da APA (American Psychological Association), referência do IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), BibTeX e RIS.
Marchi, R. & Piccoli, E. (N/A). The geopolitical worldview of Aginter Presse: A state-backed anticommunist private network in the Cold War. European Politics and Society. N/A
R. Marchi and E. Piccoli, "The geopolitical worldview of Aginter Presse: A state-backed anticommunist private network in the Cold War", in European Politics and Society, vol. N/A, N/A
@article{marchiN/A_1776209972995,
author = "Marchi, R. and Piccoli, E.",
title = "The geopolitical worldview of Aginter Presse: A state-backed anticommunist private network in the Cold War",
journal = "European Politics and Society",
year = "N/A",
volume = "N/A",
number = "",
doi = "10.1080/23745118.2026.2640003",
url = "https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/rpep21"
}
TY - JOUR TI - The geopolitical worldview of Aginter Presse: A state-backed anticommunist private network in the Cold War T2 - European Politics and Society VL - N/A AU - Marchi, R. AU - Piccoli, E. PY - N/A SN - 2374-5118 DO - 10.1080/23745118.2026.2640003 UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/rpep21 AB - During the Cold War, a constellation of state-backed private networks emerging from diverse right-wing milieus operated across Western countries to produce and circulate anti-communist propaganda. One such network was Aginter Presse, active under Portugal’s Salazarist authoritarian regime. Although frequently mentioned in the historiography of political violence, Aginter Presse remains poorly understood, particularly regarding its intellectual and geopolitical production, as opposed to its better-known paramilitary activities. This article addresses this gap by examining Aginter Presse’s ideological and geopolitical output through an extensive series of its bulletins, reconstructed by triangulating three different and relevant archives. By reconstructing its analytical frameworks and representations of international conflicts, the article reassesses Aginter Presse’s position within the broader landscape of Cold War right-wing anticommunism. The findings challenge interpretations that depict Aginter Presse as a neo-fascist clandestine organization or as a residual expression of the international fascisms that were defeated in 1945. Instead, the article argues that Aginter Presse functioned as a state-backed private network embedded in transnational far-right circuits, whose worldview largely aligned with mainstream Cold War anti-communist paradigms. By situating Aginter Presse within its wider political and geopolitical context, this study contributes to a clearer understanding of the interplay between authoritarian states, private networks, and ideological production within the Western anti-communist camp. ER -
English