In 1955, the journal was classified as
neo-Nazi by the
Institute of Contemporary History (Munich). As late as 1989, the political scientist
Eckhard Jesse described the magazine as the most important right-wing extremist publication since 1951. Thomas Pfeiffer, researcher at the
State Office for the Protection of the Constitution of
North Rhine-Westphalia places
Nation Europa on the spectrum of the
German New Right. He notes that the publication, due to its age, held far-right positions before the emergence of the New Right: the magazine "opened up early to new right-wing extremist ideology variants, instead of simply returning to Nazism." Pfeiffer characterizes
Nation Europa as a "decisive forerunner and pioneer of the New Right", which is "one of the ideas generators of German right-wing extremism". However, he notes that the intellectual level of the magazine steadily declined over the years. In later years the publication became more closely associated with
Deutsche Liga für Volk und Heimat. It was accused of giving space to
Nazism and was investigated by the German government to this end. It was also associated with
Holocaust denial and praised
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad when he announced a conference on the topic. The magazine was renamed
Nation und Europa in 1990. In 2000
Nation und Europa was merged with 'Lesen und Schenken'. They later publish a new journal of current affairs,
Zuerst!, with
Nation und Europa closed in 2009. ==Notable authors==