The article engages with emerging debates on the potential role returning Islamic State fighters may have in preventing violence and whether nonviolent radical ideology acts as a conveyor-belt or firewall to violence. Rather than focusing on former combatant ideologies, it demonstrates how framing processes—not ideology per se—are more salient indicators of whether former combatants will act as conveyor-belts or firewalls to violence. The analytical framework developed for analyzing framing processes is then applied to the case of Northern Ireland. It argues that ideology shapes and constrains the type of antiviolence framing that may emerge, which provides a middle ground between the two perspectives in the literature. Furthermore, the art...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
The continuity of terrorism and political violence from generation to generation demonstrates the ne...
Utilizing interviews with former Irish Republican Army (IRA) members, Loyalists, and community worke...
This article analyses how social movements and collective actors can affect political and social tra...
Experiences from the end of the Provisional Irish Republican Army’s campaign of armed violence have ...
Over the last decade various theoretical models of radicalization or pathways into engagement in vio...
Why do some groups fighting in civil wars target civilians more than others? We propose an explanati...
The thesis explains how terrorism campaigns end, using social movement theory to analyse the Provisi...
This article explores the disengagement and deradicalization experiences of Northern Irish loyalist ...
Over the last decade various theoretical models of radicalization or pathways into engagement in vio...
This article explores the processes involved in leaving social movements or disengaging from terrori...
Ideology matters. The return of this insight to the study of civil war has sparked a new line of lit...
This study examines the internal process that led combatant groups in Northern Ireland, focusing on ...
The focus of this article is an analysis of the potential for Northern Ireland’s loyalist terror gro...
Radicalisation is one of the most alarming security threats. This paper focuses on the issue of recr...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
The continuity of terrorism and political violence from generation to generation demonstrates the ne...
Utilizing interviews with former Irish Republican Army (IRA) members, Loyalists, and community worke...
This article analyses how social movements and collective actors can affect political and social tra...
Experiences from the end of the Provisional Irish Republican Army’s campaign of armed violence have ...
Over the last decade various theoretical models of radicalization or pathways into engagement in vio...
Why do some groups fighting in civil wars target civilians more than others? We propose an explanati...
The thesis explains how terrorism campaigns end, using social movement theory to analyse the Provisi...
This article explores the disengagement and deradicalization experiences of Northern Irish loyalist ...
Over the last decade various theoretical models of radicalization or pathways into engagement in vio...
This article explores the processes involved in leaving social movements or disengaging from terrori...
Ideology matters. The return of this insight to the study of civil war has sparked a new line of lit...
This study examines the internal process that led combatant groups in Northern Ireland, focusing on ...
The focus of this article is an analysis of the potential for Northern Ireland’s loyalist terror gro...
Radicalisation is one of the most alarming security threats. This paper focuses on the issue of recr...
Northern Ireland has endured a history of violence since its inception in 1922. The last forty years...
The continuity of terrorism and political violence from generation to generation demonstrates the ne...
Utilizing interviews with former Irish Republican Army (IRA) members, Loyalists, and community worke...