Based on empirical research in Europe, this chapter explores jihadist and far-right extremism, with a focus on embodied experience, subjectivity and imaginaries of violence. It identifies distinguishable radicalisation pathways, experienced in terms of 'us', 'you' and 'I'. Each of these pathways is associated with different imaginaries and practices of violence. The chapter demonstrates that analytical categories developed to explore jihadist violence offer important insight into contemporary far-right violence, through an examination of the attack on a Synagogue that took place in Halle, Germany, in October 2019
PREFACE Extreme right-wing terrorism has currently become a wide-spread phenomenon across the world...
The increasingly worsening threat posed by terrorism in Europe has led the media to focus their atte...
This article draws on the criminological work of Gresham Sykes and David Matza as a starting point f...
Abstract A vast amount of social science research has been dedicated to the study of Islamist extrem...
European Jihadism has evolved since it first appeared in the 1990s. In many European countries, at t...
The ongoing violent conflicts in Syria and Irak are a permanent threat for the security of European ...
Funding: Alexander Kupatadze and Javier Argomaniz received British Academy/Leverhulme Small Reserach...
The spectacular attacks on New York City on 11 September 2001 carried out by 19 suicide bombers belo...
Today Europe finds itself on the frontline in the fight against terrorism and jihadist radicalisatio...
Jihadist militants keep being a global threat. Many observers suggest that a transformation is likel...
About twenty young people travelled from a small German former mining settlement named Dinslaken-Loh...
Osama bin Laden’s demise in May 2011 marked only the symbolic end of an era. By the time of his kill...
The jihadist radicalism can represent an important factor in relationship with the process of subjec...
The awareness that the threat of terrorism is no longer linked only to the Middle East, but has home...
The bombings in Madrid and the murder of filmmaker Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam last year put radical ...
PREFACE Extreme right-wing terrorism has currently become a wide-spread phenomenon across the world...
The increasingly worsening threat posed by terrorism in Europe has led the media to focus their atte...
This article draws on the criminological work of Gresham Sykes and David Matza as a starting point f...
Abstract A vast amount of social science research has been dedicated to the study of Islamist extrem...
European Jihadism has evolved since it first appeared in the 1990s. In many European countries, at t...
The ongoing violent conflicts in Syria and Irak are a permanent threat for the security of European ...
Funding: Alexander Kupatadze and Javier Argomaniz received British Academy/Leverhulme Small Reserach...
The spectacular attacks on New York City on 11 September 2001 carried out by 19 suicide bombers belo...
Today Europe finds itself on the frontline in the fight against terrorism and jihadist radicalisatio...
Jihadist militants keep being a global threat. Many observers suggest that a transformation is likel...
About twenty young people travelled from a small German former mining settlement named Dinslaken-Loh...
Osama bin Laden’s demise in May 2011 marked only the symbolic end of an era. By the time of his kill...
The jihadist radicalism can represent an important factor in relationship with the process of subjec...
The awareness that the threat of terrorism is no longer linked only to the Middle East, but has home...
The bombings in Madrid and the murder of filmmaker Theo van Gogh in Amsterdam last year put radical ...
PREFACE Extreme right-wing terrorism has currently become a wide-spread phenomenon across the world...
The increasingly worsening threat posed by terrorism in Europe has led the media to focus their atte...
This article draws on the criminological work of Gresham Sykes and David Matza as a starting point f...