The UK Government defines vulnerability to radicalisation as, ‘the process by which a person comes to support terrorism and extremist ideologies associated with terrorist groups’. Given this relationship between radicalisation and terrorism, in 2015 the UK Government passed legislation to enhance the national capacity to pre-emptively identify vulnerable people by co opting public sector workers. This responsibility (‘the Prevent duty’) has mandated the monitoring of citizen’s behaviours based on a relationship between vulnerability, radicalisation, and terrorism that is far from concrete. Despite this, the duty is presented as a clear and actionable framework designed to support frontline workers identify vulnerability and report cases o...
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available via Westlaw UKThe past decade...
The Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) introduced a binding duty on public sector bodies in t...
This paper outlines some of the implications of counterterrorist legislation, including Prevent, for...
In response to the threat of terrorism and radicalisation, the UK government introduced the countert...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
Since 2015 Universities, and other educational and public bodies, have been placed under a legal dut...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
The present study explores how English universities respond to their legal obligation to prevent peo...
When Britain imposed the ‘Prevent duty’, a legal duty on education, health and social welfare organi...
Prevent is the UK’s counter-extremism strategy and is designed to stop people being drawn towards, o...
The Prevent Duty mandates that public authorities must work to prevent people from being drawn into ...
Since 2001, the British state has increased its powers of surveillance for the purposes of counterin...
This thesis examines how the educational profession has adapted to the role of identifying extremism...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
The study of radicalisation and its countermeasures is relatively new, thus, there are issues and co...
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available via Westlaw UKThe past decade...
The Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) introduced a binding duty on public sector bodies in t...
This paper outlines some of the implications of counterterrorist legislation, including Prevent, for...
In response to the threat of terrorism and radicalisation, the UK government introduced the countert...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
Since 2015 Universities, and other educational and public bodies, have been placed under a legal dut...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
The present study explores how English universities respond to their legal obligation to prevent peo...
When Britain imposed the ‘Prevent duty’, a legal duty on education, health and social welfare organi...
Prevent is the UK’s counter-extremism strategy and is designed to stop people being drawn towards, o...
The Prevent Duty mandates that public authorities must work to prevent people from being drawn into ...
Since 2001, the British state has increased its powers of surveillance for the purposes of counterin...
This thesis examines how the educational profession has adapted to the role of identifying extremism...
The UK Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) (CTSA) calls for a partnership between the governme...
The study of radicalisation and its countermeasures is relatively new, thus, there are issues and co...
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available via Westlaw UKThe past decade...
The Counter Terrorism and Security Act (2015) introduced a binding duty on public sector bodies in t...
This paper outlines some of the implications of counterterrorist legislation, including Prevent, for...