Robert Steuckers

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Born (1956-01-08) 8 January 1956 (age 70)
Uccle, Belgium
Occupations
  • Activist
  • writer
Robert Steuckers
Born (1956-01-08) 8 January 1956 (age 70)
Uccle, Belgium
Occupations
  • Activist
  • writer
MovementEuropean New Right

Robert Steuckers (born 8 January 1956) is a Belgian writer and political activist on the far right, associated with the European New Right. He is a former member of GRECE and formed his own organisation Synergies européennes in 1994. He promotes pan-European nationalism and has been described as close to the Identitarian movement.

Robert Steuckers was born in Uccle, Belgium, on 8 January 1956.[1] He is Flemish but nearly bilingual in Dutch and French.[2] He joined Alain de Benoist's French New Right organisation GRECE in 1973 and left it for the first time in 1981 to found his own similar group, Études, recherches, et orientations européennes (lit.'European studies, research, and orientations').[3]

From 1983 to 1999, Steuckers published the journal Vouloir (lit.'Will').[3] In 1985, he and the fellow New Rightists Guillaume Faye and Pierre Freson wrote the brochure Little Lexicon of the European Partisan that was distributed by the far-right groups Third Way and Forces Nouvelles.[4] Around 1990, Steuckers functioned as a link between the European New Right and the Russian far-right thinker Aleksandr Dugin. Dugin was influenced by articles in Steuckers' journals Orientations and Vouloir, the two met in July 1990, and it was Steuckers who introduced Dugin to geopolitics and the term National Bolshevism.[5]

Having left GRECE for a second time in 1993, Steuckers founded the organisation Synergies européennes (SE; lit.'European synergies') in 1994 and was joined by other New Rightists who had fallen out with Benoist. SE promotes a Eurasianist ideology distinct from Dugin's Russian project, envisioning a political axis of Paris, Berlin and Moscow. A prominent member became the Romanian Jean Parvulesco, who envisioned a political union of white people.[6] SE has never attracted the same media attention as GRECE, but figured in public discussions when some of its academic members were accused of having created a New Right faculty at the Jean Moulin University Lyon 3.[2] Steuckers operates the associated website Euro-Synergies, which publishes articles and essays in favour of pan-European nationalism and against liberalism and globalism.[7] He describes himself as a métapolitologue, with which he means a metapolitical political scientist.[8] For periods, Steuckers was close to the Belgian far-right parties New Belgian Front and Vlaams Blok.[3]

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