Is radicalization inherently conducive to terrorism? This paper addresses this fault-line within discourses on radicalization by analyzing the political awakening and mobilization of British Muslims operating in environments targeted by violent-extremists. The results show that despite undergoing the ‘root causes’ and ‘triggers’ associated with radicalization, and even having direct contact with violent-extremists, research participants still rejected terrorism. This paper analyzes why participants’ radicalism promoted resilience to political violence rather than propel them towards it. It challenges the selection bias within terrorism and radicalization studies which constrain our ability to understand this phenomenon by focusing on the ra...
This paper explores why the Prevent strand of the UK Government’s counter-terrorism strategy, CONTES...
This research was funded by the Leverhulme Trust and the Scottish Institute of Policing Research.The...
Why do ordinary people become supportive of violent, extremist ideologies? Over the past several yea...
After the London bombings in July 2005, the concern of terrorism scholars and policy makers has turn...
Successful radicalization posits three outcomes: extremism, terrorism or both. As these are undesira...
Our understanding of how people become involved in terrorism and violent extremism has transformed s...
This paper proposes a rethinking of ‘radicalisation’ as a process with no definite beginning or inev...
This article argues that to better understand involvement in terrorism, research needs to focus on w...
This paper examines existing psychological theories of radicalisation. An interview with a British s...
This article questions the utility of the term ‘radicalization’ as a focus for counter-terrorism res...
Though widely used by academics and policymakers in the context of the “War on Terror”, the concept ...
In this article, the authors apply the four-phase radicalization model proposed by Silber and Bhatt1...
This paper examines existing psychological theories of radicalisation. An interview with a British s...
Radicalization research explores the socialization process prior to becoming an extremist and/or eng...
Radicalization is a major challenge of contemporary global security. It conjures up images of violen...
This paper explores why the Prevent strand of the UK Government’s counter-terrorism strategy, CONTES...
This research was funded by the Leverhulme Trust and the Scottish Institute of Policing Research.The...
Why do ordinary people become supportive of violent, extremist ideologies? Over the past several yea...
After the London bombings in July 2005, the concern of terrorism scholars and policy makers has turn...
Successful radicalization posits three outcomes: extremism, terrorism or both. As these are undesira...
Our understanding of how people become involved in terrorism and violent extremism has transformed s...
This paper proposes a rethinking of ‘radicalisation’ as a process with no definite beginning or inev...
This article argues that to better understand involvement in terrorism, research needs to focus on w...
This paper examines existing psychological theories of radicalisation. An interview with a British s...
This article questions the utility of the term ‘radicalization’ as a focus for counter-terrorism res...
Though widely used by academics and policymakers in the context of the “War on Terror”, the concept ...
In this article, the authors apply the four-phase radicalization model proposed by Silber and Bhatt1...
This paper examines existing psychological theories of radicalisation. An interview with a British s...
Radicalization research explores the socialization process prior to becoming an extremist and/or eng...
Radicalization is a major challenge of contemporary global security. It conjures up images of violen...
This paper explores why the Prevent strand of the UK Government’s counter-terrorism strategy, CONTES...
This research was funded by the Leverhulme Trust and the Scottish Institute of Policing Research.The...
Why do ordinary people become supportive of violent, extremist ideologies? Over the past several yea...