The Prevent Duty requires universities in the United Kingdom to identify and report students who might be seen as ‘vulnerable’ to radicalisation. Since its introduction in 2015, the duty has been subject to increasing empirical research in the education sector. However, there has been limited research that specifically explores Muslim students’ perceptions of Prevent in British universities. This paper directly addresses this gap in research by drawing upon the qualitative experiences of 25 university students who self-identified as ‘British Muslims’. Individual, semi-structured interviews were transcribed and analysed using Thematic Analysis (Braun and Clarke, 2006). The findings demonstrate the securitisation of higher education and ‘poli...
In July 2015, a legal duty came into force requiring that ‘specified authorities’, including schools...
Since the 7/7 bombings of July 2005, Britain has experienced a domestic terror threat posed by a sma...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
The Prevent strategy at UK universities is designed to reduce the possibility of university students...
This article reports on the results of a mixed-methods survey of 152 self-selecting Muslim universit...
In response to the threat of terrorism and radicalisation, the UK government introduced the countert...
The present study explores how English universities respond to their legal obligation to prevent peo...
Islam on Campus explores how Islam is represented, perceived, and lived within higher education in B...
Islam on Campus explores how Islam is represented, perceived, and lived within higher education in B...
The government’s counterterrorism policy, known as CONTEST, has four components: Pursue, Protect, Pr...
This thesis is a conceptual study of institutionalised Islamophobia in British universities. Myanaly...
Since 2015 Universities, and other educational and public bodies, have been placed under a legal dut...
The UK Government defines vulnerability to radicalisation as, ‘the process by which a person comes t...
The university sphere has become an increasingly researched topic as a unique institution that can a...
Freedom of speech and extremism in university campuses are a major source of debate and moral panic ...
In July 2015, a legal duty came into force requiring that ‘specified authorities’, including schools...
Since the 7/7 bombings of July 2005, Britain has experienced a domestic terror threat posed by a sma...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
The Prevent strategy at UK universities is designed to reduce the possibility of university students...
This article reports on the results of a mixed-methods survey of 152 self-selecting Muslim universit...
In response to the threat of terrorism and radicalisation, the UK government introduced the countert...
The present study explores how English universities respond to their legal obligation to prevent peo...
Islam on Campus explores how Islam is represented, perceived, and lived within higher education in B...
Islam on Campus explores how Islam is represented, perceived, and lived within higher education in B...
The government’s counterterrorism policy, known as CONTEST, has four components: Pursue, Protect, Pr...
This thesis is a conceptual study of institutionalised Islamophobia in British universities. Myanaly...
Since 2015 Universities, and other educational and public bodies, have been placed under a legal dut...
The UK Government defines vulnerability to radicalisation as, ‘the process by which a person comes t...
The university sphere has become an increasingly researched topic as a unique institution that can a...
Freedom of speech and extremism in university campuses are a major source of debate and moral panic ...
In July 2015, a legal duty came into force requiring that ‘specified authorities’, including schools...
Since the 7/7 bombings of July 2005, Britain has experienced a domestic terror threat posed by a sma...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...